"Przemo Firszt" a écrit:
> What about submitting patches using "git send-email" (default method for
> linux kernel). Is it possible?
I'd say it depends on the particular GNOME sub-project . The Nemiver
Debugger sub-project, for instance, happily accepts (and even prefers)
patches sent to its ma
"stefan skoglund(agj)" a écrit:
> I dont think Redhat wants
The correct way to write it is Red Hat -- not Redhat, nor RedHat or
whatever.
Thank you for keeping that in mind in your future messages.
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"Jasper St. Pierre" a écrit:
> So, one, GMail's Conversation View *isn't* threading.
Well, so it should support thread too then.
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"Jasper St. Pierre" a écrit:
> Various people have documented why the header is broken, and thus why gmail
> doesn't care about or use it.
I'd be interested to learn about the rationale behind that. Until then,
I still think that honouring reply-to and references headers (which are
the standard
Philip Withnall a écrit:
> On Wed, 2012-12-12 at 17:35 +0100, Dodji Seketeli wrote:
>> Philip Withnall a écrit:
>>
>> > Are there any reasons against putting UTF-8 characters in the source
>> > code (which weren’t covered in my blog post)?
>>
>> So
Philip Withnall a écrit:
> Are there any reasons against putting UTF-8 characters in the source
> code (which weren’t covered in my blog post)?
Sorry, but which blog post?
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Andrea Veri a écrit:
> I introduced a little fix yesterday night that will modify how bugmail's
> subjects appear, that for Gmail's threading to work properly. (as you may
> know Gmail doesn't look for the In-Reply-To: header but for the subject
> instead)
Whoah! The proper way to handle this w
Andre Klapper a écrit:
> ===
> GTK+
> ===
I'd suggest this Gtk+ bug be added to the list:
[Bug 661973] gtk+ reacts on F10 press incorrectly
It makes some useful applications be hardly usable using the keyboard :(
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Patryk Zawadzki a écrit:
> The question is whether the freedom is more important than
> productivity of course.
I'd rather keep the Freedom, and encourage people to work on improving
the productivity in the realm of that freedom we fought so hard to get.
I mean, we could imagine asking the boar
Milan Crha a écrit:
> On Wed, 2011-09-14 at 12:22 +0100, Ross Burton wrote:
>> --enable-maintainer-mode enable make rules and dependencies not useful
>> (and sometimes confusing) to the casual installer
[...]
>
> the above help string might then just suggest that I wo
Denis Washington a écrit:
> True. As I said, I'm not looking for configurability, but for an
> overall solution that allows to both suspend and power down.
And to hibernate, please.
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Emmanuele Bassi a écrit:
> On 2011-07-23 at 11:27, Dodji Seketeli wrote:
>> Why? Do you have an example that would show where Shaun's proposal
>> falls short?
>
> it falls short in showing:
>
> System Settings
> KDE System Settings
>
> under Gn
Denis Washington a écrit:
> Am 23.07.2011 11:54, schrieb Giovanni Campagna:
>> Il giorno sab, 23/07/2011 alle 11.27 +0200, Dodji Seketeli ha scritto:
>>> Matthias Clasen a écrit:
>>>
>>>> I don't think Shauns proposal addresses the issue, really.
>
Matthias Clasen a écrit:
> I don't think Shauns proposal addresses the issue, really.
Why? Do you have an example that would show where Shaun's proposal
falls short?
> If you want an app to be usable in different environments, then there
> are some good solutions:
> - make sure the app is self
Colin Walters a écrit:
> I would really love to see someone set up official logging of GNOME
> IRC, like MeetBot or whatever. Several people run private loggers,
> but we'd just need to make clear to participants that it is being
> publicly logged.
If IRC logs are posted somewhere, then there s
Jan de Groot a écrit:
> On Sun, 2011-04-17 at 08:45 +0530, Nirbheek Chauhan wrote:
>> This is why I think GNOME should start a marketing campaign of
>> "Awesome Hardware" which is known to work flawlessly, and "Sadface
>> Hardware" which is known to work, but with glitches. This can help
>> users
Sam Thursfield a écrit:
> Suspend and hibernate are both hacks around the fact that power on and
> power off take a long time and that our session manager doesn't save
> session state.
This seems to be an over-simplification to me. Processes managed by the
session manager are just a part of wha
Christopher Roy Bratusek a écrit:
> especially Emanuelles
It would be a good start to spell Emmanuele's name correctly.
Just my 0.1 cent.
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Benjamin Otte a écrit:
[...]
> Hrm, in 90% of the cases where I need information about why changes were
> made, I
> need git blame/cvs annotate style output, and a ChangeLog cannot give me this
> information. (Also, the tools to filter ChangeLogs suck, or are there
> equivalents to git log -- $
Emmanuele Bassi a écrit:
> *if*, on the other hand, you want a ChangeLog because it makes your life
> as a packager easier (for some unknown reason) then you should probably
> ask for a Gnome Goal to add the autogeneration of the ChangeLog from the
> Git commit log to every GNOME project. the pat
Le lundi 26 avril 2010 à 21:24:19% (+0200), Siegfried-Angel Gevatter Pujals a
écrit:
> 2010/4/26 Dodji Seketeli :
> > It would be interesting to find a way to make these tools -- bugzilla or
> > whatever patch review system -- be interoperable with email.
>
> Launchpad
Le lundi 26 avril 2010 à 17:18:31% (+1000), Andrew Cowie a écrit:
> but the whole point of decentralized VCS is disconnected operation
> and having to have an active internet connection to get to some
> centralized website in order to follow through workflow is a
> non-starter for most of us.
Le sam. 03 avril 2010 à 14:52:50 (+0200), Josselin Mouette a écrit:
> As things are going, you are leaving us no choice but to keep shipping
> gnome-panel by default for a very long time, unless we want to provide
> two radically different user experiences.
I agree with this. I would guess that we
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Tomas Frydrych a écrit :
> Josselin Mouette wrote:
>> I don’t think maintaining a few more packages (especially packages that
>> already exist today) is a big effort. But it stills bother me if we are
>> going to propose two entirely different user exp
Calum Benson a écrit :
> I guess the other category here is the current generation of thin
> clients... not 'legacy hardware' by any means, they just aren't really
> designed for this sort of thing.
Then why not just run the current metacity + gnome applet combinations of today
on that hardware ?
BJörn Lindqvist a écrit :
[...]
There is no GNOME standard for indenting C code -- every project use
their own indentation style (unfortunately). But to reformat a file to
an indentation style many projects use, you can just run "indent"
without any arguments.
I am sorry, but I think there is
do ? Open a bug on each module and hope most maintainers
> will accept the fix ?
That's tedious to do, but it seems it's would be the most efficient
thing to do, I am afraid :-\
/me cheers pterjean up.
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e if I am wrong here.
Empathy/Telepathy does look really promising though and I think the
nice thing would be to see some kind of integration work going on at
some point. I mean, one could imagine some telepathy-opal initiative to
take place where necessary, or seeing Ekiga re-using some libempa
On Mon, 9 Apr 2007 19:32:30 -0600
"Elijah Newren" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This made our decision on the topic at the recent release-team meeting
> very easy. :-) gtkmm is now allowed as a dependency.
What a nice easter present :-)
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Dodji Seketeli
http://
lthough not based on gtkmm.
> So the question is, do we want to allow programs in the
> desktop that are written entirely in C++?
It would be nice to send a positive signal to the c++ developers
sitting out there :-)
> If so, then
> it would be silly to forbid them from using gtkmm.
Ame
lthough not based on gtkmm.
> So the question is, do we want to allow programs in the
> desktop that are written entirely in C++?
It would be nice to send a positive signal to the c++ developers
sitting out there :-)
> If so, then
> it would be silly to forbid them from using gtkmm.
Ame
> I might be stupid but Vermine reversed would be enimrev?
Heh. No. What you say is not stupid :-)
What I reversed is not the string of characters, but the string of
syllables (or phonemes, if you prefer). I agree Syllables are hard to
define because their definition is at least language specific
> If we did it now, we'll probably have Devhelp and Glade-3. For G20 we
> might add Nerimeriver (how do you spell it?) and maybe Anjuta.
It's Nemiver :-) Nemiver is the word "Vermine" reversed. Vermine means
"Bug" in French.
I hope this small explanation will help you remember the spelling in
the
Hello,
This sounds like a good idea to me.
Maybe you should bring the developer of applications like liferea into
the loop. There is certainly something to be shared with them. This
kind of API could simplify the code base of apps like liferea and
allow other applications to provide syndication t
On Tue, Oct 11, 2005 at 05:12:20PM -0400, Mark McLoughlin wrote:
> Poor Wanda. I think she's too old to move, personally. Her frail heart
> just couldn't take it. Perhaps its just time to dump the poor old dear ?
Please, don't kill it. Wanda is the prefered GNOME "application" of my
girl fri
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