cgf, I've been using cygwin off and on for ~14 years and I'm aware what
it is and is not. Getting defensive and huffy over a rhetorical (not
technical/internal) comparison of cygwin to other "collections of tools
which provide [with varying completeness] a Linux look and feel
environment for Wi
On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 08:44:50AM -0600, Daniel Jensen wrote:
>>Providing the functionality of some obscure, barely used project is not
>>a stated goal for Cygwin. No one here is interested in adapting
>>ourselves to people's expectations for the project if the expectations
>>have nothing to do w
Providing the functionality of some obscure, barely used project is not
a stated goal for Cygwin. No one here is interested in adapting
ourselves to people's expectations for the project if the expectations
have nothing to do with the goals of the project.
??
unxutils is just a bundle of win32
On Sun, May 12, 2013 at 10:37:34AM -0600, Daniel Jensen wrote:
>You'll note, however, that for most distros Perl doesn't depend on
>openssl, libssp, etc.
>
>Also, including extra optional stuff as dependencies is considerably
>more acceptable when you're installing a primary OS. We expect a Fedor
You'll note, however, that for most distros Perl doesn't depend on
openssl, libssp, etc.
Also, including extra optional stuff as dependencies is considerably
more acceptable when you're installing a primary OS. We expect a Fedora
or Arch install to need 10GB and daily security updates. That's
On 2013-05-10 19:49, Rick Patterson wrote:
So, the issue seems to be the "vim-common" common component includes Perl,
Yes, and correctly so, as there are five Perl scripts in vim-common.
Vi is a standard part of all the UNIXes I've ever worked with
So is perl. :-)
Yaakov
--
Problem repo
On 11/05/13 01:49, Rick Patterson wrote:
I don't use Perl, but even if I did, I don't want my Cygwin bloated with stuff I didn't
ask for. I just wanted Vi, and I got a Perl programming environment instead that came
with a "free" vi editor.
In Fedora[1] and ArchLinux[2], vim is dependent on pe
Hi.
So, the issue seems to be the "vim-common" common component includes Perl, and
Perl is bringing in all that other stuff. I see there was some discussion on
the forums years ago about making this change.
It appears that VIM can be built to interface to certain languages like Perl.
This is a
On Wed, May 08, 2013 at 10:43:59PM +0400, Andrey Repin wrote:
> Greetings, Rick Patterson!
> There's tons of more useful editors for Windows.
I heartily disagree with that statement.
I'm not altogether convinced that Cygwin's Vim _needs_ to include the
Perl interface, but then again, I usually h
Rick Patterson sent the following at Tuesday, May 07, 2013 10:09 PM
>I am wondering why installing VIm installs so many other things: After
>doing a default install of Cygwin, and then not finding VIm, I added VIM
>to the install as well, but found it greatly increased my Cygwin install
>as follows
Greetings, Rick Patterson!
> I am wondering why installing VIm installs so many other things: After
> doing a default install of Cgwin, and then not finding VIm, I added VIM to
> the install as well, but found it greatly increased my Cygwin install as
> follows.
> Dependencies listed to be inst
Hello.
I am wondering why installing VIm installs so many other things: After doing a
default install of Cgwin, and then not finding VIm, I added VIM to the install
as well, but found it greatly increased my Cygwin install as follows.
Dependencies listed to be installed:
crypt
libdb4.5
libgb
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