Hi Tim, It seems than line 224 of cross platform sqAtomicOps.h was garbaged by a /tmp/ccf1WMiY.s: in commit 2727
On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 10:21 AM, Nicolas Cellier < nicolas.cellier.aka.nice@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Tim, It seems than line 224 of cross platform sqAtomicOps.h was garbaged by a /tmp/ccf1WMiY.s: in commit 2727
Hi Nicolas,
Just a note on your slang: I think you mean "trashed." You can't really use "garbage" as a verb.
Colin
On 29-04-2013, at 10:59 AM, Colin Putney colin@wiresong.com wrote:
Just a note on your slang: I think you mean "trashed." You can't really use "garbage" as a verb.
Unless he's writing in American. American can verb anything...
tim -- tim Rowledge; tim@rowledge.org; http://www.rowledge.org/tim Strange OpCodes: SDD: Scratch Disk and Die
The right explanation is that I'm speaking american like Mr Jourdain is speaking prose ;)
2013/4/29 tim Rowledge tim@rowledge.org
On 29-04-2013, at 10:59 AM, Colin Putney colin@wiresong.com wrote:
Just a note on your slang: I think you mean "trashed." You can't really
use "garbage" as a verb.
Unless he's writing in American. American can verb anything...
tim
tim Rowledge; tim@rowledge.org; http://www.rowledge.org/tim Strange OpCodes: SDD: Scratch Disk and Die
On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 11:03:57AM -0700, tim Rowledge wrote:
On 29-04-2013, at 10:59 AM, Colin Putney colin@wiresong.com wrote:
Just a note on your slang: I think you mean "trashed." You can't really use "garbage" as a verb.
Unless he's writing in American. American can verb anything...
I just, like, totally resentment your inference.
Dave
- with apologies non-native speakers of proper American English
As, apparently, Canadians, since you just verbed "verb". :)
On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 1:03 PM, tim Rowledge tim@rowledge.org wrote:
On 29-04-2013, at 10:59 AM, Colin Putney colin@wiresong.com wrote:
Just a note on your slang: I think you mean "trashed." You can't really use "garbage" as a verb.
Unless he's writing in American. American can verb anything...
tim
tim Rowledge; tim@rowledge.org; http://www.rowledge.org/tim Strange OpCodes: SDD: Scratch Disk and Die
They also speak verbingly?
frank
On 2 May 2013 15:45, Chris Muller asqueaker@gmail.com wrote:
As, apparently, Canadians, since you just verbed "verb". :)
On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 1:03 PM, tim Rowledge tim@rowledge.org wrote:
On 29-04-2013, at 10:59 AM, Colin Putney colin@wiresong.com wrote:
Just a note on your slang: I think you mean "trashed." You can't really use "garbage" as a verb.
Unless he's writing in American. American can verb anything...
tim
tim Rowledge; tim@rowledge.org; http://www.rowledge.org/tim Strange OpCodes: SDD: Scratch Disk and Die
On 02-05-2013, at 7:57 AM, Frank Shearar frank.shearar@gmail.com wrote:
They also speak verbingly?
frank
On 2 May 2013 15:45, Chris Muller asqueaker@gmail.com wrote:
As, apparently, Canadians, since you just verbed "verb". :)
Except I'm as British as one can be, merely residing in what I once heard those delightful dingbats on Faux Noos refer to as 'Soviet Canuckistan'. Colin may have a more local take on the practice up here. I simply used the grammatical misconstruction (under the doctrine of fair use, another shibboleth of the ridiculously rabid residents of right-wing rubbish repackager fux noise) by way of illustrative artistic licence.
tim -- tim Rowledge; tim@rowledge.org; http://www.rowledge.org/tim Strange OpCodes: DSO: Do Something or Other
On 29-04-2013, at 10:21 AM, Nicolas Cellier nicolas.cellier.aka.nice@gmail.com wrote:
It seems than line 224 of cross platform sqAtomicOps.h was garbaged by a /tmp/ccf1WMiY.s: in commit 2727
Huh. I'll take a look and see if it follows on my machines. Obviously shouldn't have done that.
tim -- tim Rowledge; tim@rowledge.org; http://www.rowledge.org/tim Debugger: A tool that substitutes afterthought for forethought.
On 29-04-2013, at 10:21 AM, Nicolas Cellier nicolas.cellier.aka.nice@gmail.com wrote:
It seems than line 224 of cross platform sqAtomicOps.h was garbaged by a /tmp/ccf1WMiY.s: in commit 2727
Yuck. That must have been a dumb-thumb edit mistake at the last minute. I'm having to use LeafPad to edit on my Pi and it's not what I'd call a good editor. Please do not suggest emacs. I used emacs for several years a long time ago and my therapist thinks I might be recovered from the trauma in a century or two.
tim -- tim Rowledge; tim@rowledge.org; http://www.rowledge.org/tim "How many tnuctip does it take to change a lightbulb?" "Depends what you want them to change it into."
On 29 April 2013 19:33, tim Rowledge tim@rowledge.org wrote:
On 29-04-2013, at 10:21 AM, Nicolas Cellier nicolas.cellier.aka.nice@gmail.com wrote:
It seems than line 224 of cross platform sqAtomicOps.h was garbaged by a /tmp/ccf1WMiY.s: in commit 2727
Yuck. That must have been a dumb-thumb edit mistake at the last minute. I'm having to use LeafPad to edit on my Pi and it's not what I'd call a good editor. Please do not suggest emacs. I used emacs for several years a long time ago and my therapist thinks I might be recovered from the trauma in a century or two.
I dunno... those emacs users look pretty hardcore: http://www.lshift.net/blog/2013/04/28/emacs-versus-vim <MrT>I pity the fool who uses vim!</MrT>
frank
tim
tim Rowledge; tim@rowledge.org; http://www.rowledge.org/tim "How many tnuctip does it take to change a lightbulb?" "Depends what you want them to change it into."
On 29-04-2013, at 11:36 AM, Frank Shearar frank.shearar@gmail.com wrote:
I dunno... those emacs users look pretty hardcore: http://www.lshift.net/blog/2013/04/28/emacs-versus-vim <MrT>I pity the fool who uses vim!</MrT>
Even though the actual text-editing is insane (as in select-{copy|move}-to-cursor rather than cut/copy/paste) I find StrongEd to be the most effective programming editor. I can load all the sources for a squeak vm in a few seconds. Click on a word and ctl-sh-f will find and list all occurrences across the many files in not much over a frame refresh cycle, ie instantly. click on a word and F1 will find the StrongHelp entry for it if one exists - really good as a quick (again, near instant) reminder of the api needed or definition of the word etc. It folds text according to user set rules. It can do syntax markup according to user set rules (not that I like that) and drive make/cc/asm/link/etc. All on a machine about 7% the performance of a typical desktop. It's a great example of how so much 'modern' software is wasting time by the chrono-bucket.
tim -- tim Rowledge; tim@rowledge.org; http://www.rowledge.org/tim Compromise, says Prof. Trefusis, is stalling between two fools
I just hope your therapist isn't the built-in Emacs therapist. Her name is Eliza, and if you've seen her at all, I would strongly recommend a second opinion before it's too late.
OTOH Emacs hurts less if you swap the control and caps-lock keys; I think that was the original configuration. Downside is having to ignore the little caps lock light :/
On Apr 29, 2013, at 11:33 AM, tim Rowledge tim@rowledge.org wrote:
On 29-04-2013, at 10:21 AM, Nicolas Cellier nicolas.cellier.aka.nice@gmail.com wrote:
It seems than line 224 of cross platform sqAtomicOps.h was garbaged by a /tmp/ccf1WMiY.s: in commit 2727
Yuck. That must have been a dumb-thumb edit mistake at the last minute. I'm having to use LeafPad to edit on my Pi and it's not what I'd call a good editor. Please do not suggest emacs. I used emacs for several years a long time ago and my therapist thinks I might be recovered from the trauma in a century or two.
tim
tim Rowledge; tim@rowledge.org; http://www.rowledge.org/tim "How many tnuctip does it take to change a lightbulb?" "Depends what you want them to change it into."
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