Re: [gentoo-user] Re: D and Gentoo

2014-01-13 Thread Elias Diem
On 2014-01-12, walt wrote: I know absolutely nothing about D, which makes me qualified to ask how you can tell if the 'd' useflag is working or not ;) Hehe. Good question. Well I enabled this USE flag for gcc but I don't have an executable that starts with gcc... gdc... And furthermore if

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: D and Gentoo

2014-01-13 Thread Pavel Kazakov
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On 01/13/2014 02:25 AM, Elias Diem wrote: On 2014-01-12, walt wrote: I know absolutely nothing about D, which makes me qualified to ask how you can tell if the 'd' useflag is working or not ;) Hehe. Good question. Well I enabled this USE

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: D and Gentoo

2014-01-13 Thread Elias Diem
Hi Pavel On 2014-01-13, Pavel Kazakov wrote: According to 'euse -i d', the 'd' flag only shows up for '=sys-devel/gcc-3.4.6-r2' and '=sys-devel/gcc-4.1.2'. I'm assuming you are using a newer version of gcc that doesn't have the d use flag. Indeed. Thank you for the explanation. --

[gentoo-user] Re: D and Gentoo

2014-01-12 Thread walt
On 01/12/2014 10:14 AM, Elias Diem wrote: Hi all What's the best way to have a D compiler in Gentoo? I know that there is a USE flag for gcc which adds D, but apparently it doesn't work. I know absolutely nothing about D, which makes me qualified to ask how you can tell if the 'd'

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: d

2006-07-13 Thread Roy Wright
James wrote: The biggest problem is I'm looking for a tool, gui, or automated approach to discover documents (html, xml, doc-book etc) that go with the myriad of software pacakges. I do not need a tool to parse my directories, I'm looking for a tool that saves me time by producing a unified

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: d

2006-07-12 Thread Roy Wright
James wrote: Boy this is interesting. beagle: /etc/beagle /usr/lib/beagle /usr/share/beagle /usr/lib/beagle show a mulitude of *.exe *.dll files these are microsuck files (yuck) Beagle is a mono application. Mono is the open source implementation of C# which is a derivative of java

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: d

2006-07-12 Thread Hans-Werner Hilse
Hi, On Wed, 12 Jul 2006 03:07:44 -0500 Roy Wright [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Beagle is a mono application. Mono is the open source implementation of C# which is a derivative of java aimed specifically at windoze by M $. wrong. C# is a dialect one can use to create .NET programs. .NET is a bit

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: d

2006-07-12 Thread Roy Wright
Hans-Werner Hilse wrote: Hi, On Wed, 12 Jul 2006 03:07:44 -0500 Roy Wright [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Beagle is a mono application. Mono is the open source implementation of C# which is a derivative of java aimed specifically at windoze by M $. wrong. C# is a dialect one can use to

[gentoo-user] Re: d

2006-07-12 Thread James
Roy Wright royw at cisco.com writes: Hans-Werner Hilse wrote: wrong. C# is a dialect one can use to create .NET programs. .NET is a bit similar to the Java concept. But there are numerous other languages one can use to create .NET assemblies. Mono is an attempt to create a .NET

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: d

2006-07-12 Thread Justin R Findlay
On Wed, Jul 12, 2006 at 03:27:30PM +, James wrote: Like man pages for ascii text, but which covers all of the various types and locations for docs. Collectively, a lot of time is wasted since each individual has to search ebuilds, lib, share, wikis, web sites and googling to find these

[gentoo-user] Re: d

2006-07-12 Thread Francesco Talamona
On Tuesday 11 July 2006 22:28, James wrote: Francesco Talamona ti.liame at email.it writes: It seems like quite often I have to go on a search expedition for docs beagle (I haven't looked a beagle since 0.0.10). Using 0.2.7, it's quite good. Yes this is the sort of tool

[gentoo-user] Re: d

2006-07-11 Thread James
Francesco Talamona ti.liame at email.it writes: It seems like quite often I have to go on a search expedition for docs beagle (I haven't looked a beagle since 0.0.10). Using 0.2.7, it's quite good. Yes this is the sort of tool I've been wanting. If one considers the collective

[gentoo-user] Re: d

2006-07-11 Thread James
Francesco Talamona ti.liame at email.it writes: The closest would be beagle (I haven't looked a beagle since 0.0.10). Using 0.2.7, it's quite good. Boy this is interesting. beagle: /etc/beagle /usr/lib/beagle /usr/share/beagle /usr/lib/beagle show a mulitude of *.exe *.dll files