> On 30 Nov 2016, at 11:26, Tim Mackinnon <tim@testit.works> wrote:
> 
> I just tried the new example on the website (factorial is a great example 
> from the command line - I like it).
> 
> The output is:
> 
> $ ./pharo Pharo.image eval "42 factorial"
> 'No change'
> 1405006117752879898543142606244511569936384000000000
> $ 
> 
> Out of curiosity, What is the ‘No Change’ message above the answer?

no idea :)
obviously… a remaining error :P

Esteban

> 
> Tim
> 
>> On 29 Nov 2016, at 08:41, Esteban Lorenzano <esteba...@gmail.com 
>> <mailto:esteba...@gmail.com>> wrote:
>> 
>> yes, but no need… I already fixed it :)
>> 
>>> On 29 Nov 2016, at 09:29, p...@highoctane.be <mailto:p...@highoctane.be> 
>>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Report them on pharo.fogbugz.com <http://pharo.fogbugz.com/>
>>> 
>>> http://pharo.org/contribute-report-bug 
>>> <http://pharo.org/contribute-report-bug>
>>> 
>>> Use Project: Websites as the reference.
>>> 
>>> Phil
>>> 
>>> On Tue, Nov 29, 2016 at 12:57 AM, Tim Mackinnon <tim@testit.works 
>>> <mailto:tim@testit.works>> wrote:
>>> Hi Guys - how is the best way to report website and text bugs?
>>> 
>>> As I know the English is not always a first language (and you guys are busy 
>>> writing code anyway) - its up to us native English speakers to chip in 
>>> where we can.
>>> 
>>> I was pleased to get the notice that on OSX Sierra I need to do something 
>>> extra to get Pharo to work, however the text could be slightly corrected 
>>> eg. (Bolded words changed)
>>> 
>>> Are you using macOS Sierra?
>>> Due to changes in security policies of macOS, you will need to put the VM 
>>> in the  /Applications folder.
>>> We are working to fix this temporary inconvenience.
>>> 
>>> 
>>> Also - the Hello world command line example on the front page doesn’t work 
>>> on a standard Terminal on a Mac (you get an error:
>>> 
>>> $ ./pharo Pharo.image eval "Stdio stdout << 'Hello,World!'"
>>> -bash: !'": event not found
>>> 
>>> The culprit is of course the “!” Character so a better example might be:
>>> 
>>> $ ./pharo Pharo.image eval "Stdio stdout << 'Hello World'"
>>> Hello WorldStdioStream: 'stdout'
>>> 
>>> Although, in this case, is it expected that the return string is merged 
>>> with some other output text (e.g. the StdioStream:….?). I think its an 
>>> impressive example, but it just doesn’t quite look right?
>>> 
>>> 
>>> Tim
>>> 
>> 
> 

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