Will Coleda (via RT) wrote:
While I expect it to print ok 1, it instead prints:
Null PMC access in invoke()
current instr.: 'main' pc 50 (compile.pir:8)
W/o testing it I'd say that ...
code .= print \
code .= printme
code .= \\n\\n
... a single print statement isn't a subroutine,
I'd like to know where EXACTLY whitespace is permitted in rules. Is it
legal to write
\c [CHARACTER NAME]
or must I write
\c[CHARACTER NAME]
--
Jeff japhy Pinyan % How can we ever be the sold short or
RPI Acacia Brother #734 % the cheated, we who for every service
Jeff 'japhy' Pinyan wrote:
I'd like to know where EXACTLY whitespace is permitted in rules. Is it
legal to write
\c [CHARACTER NAME]
or must I write
\c[CHARACTER NAME]
The latter, I believe. It's a single token.
Damian
Will Coleda wrote:
.local string code
code .= print \
code .= printme
code .= \\n\\n
This may be related, but your first .= is acting upon an uninitialised
variable.
Nick
Nick Glencross wrote:
Will Coleda wrote:
.local string code
code .= print \
code .= printme
code .= \\n\\n
This may be related, but your first .= is acting upon an uninitialised
variable.
Actually, the code dies before this. Worth fixing as you may get hit by
a Heisenbug at
Leopold Toetsch wrote:
I'm currently rewriting the hash implementation in src/hash.c. The new
hash structure has just one piece of malloced memory with bucket
pointers and buckets in one piece.
The code is committed now, tests are passing as before the test.
leo
Fixed the uninitialized string error Nick pointed out, but as he noted, it
has no effect on the error.
Leopold Toetsch writes:
Will Coleda (via RT) wrote:
While I expect it to print ok 1, it instead prints:
Null PMC access in invoke()
current instr.: 'main' pc 50 (compile.pir:8)
W/o
On 5/13/05, David Landgren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So what I *really* think about Perl's test reporting is that the results
are shown in the wrong order, and that it would also be better to use a
less ambiguous word than 'got'. 'actual' would be nice.
I like the word actual much better than
On 5/18/05, Kevin Scaldeferri [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Being a good coder, I wrote a unit test to
reproduce the problem before I fixed it.
Let gold ingots rain from the heavens and collect into your front yard! :)
The test is happy when I run
it normally, and even when I run it under
I'm working on a new module, Class::Agreement, and I've started by
writing the documentation. If anyone has a few minutes, I'd like some
feedback as to whether my descriptions of the concepts make sense and
if you like the syntax.
HTML: http://reliant.langworth.com/~ian/Class-Agreement.html
Hi,
Yuval Kogman nothingmuch at woobling.org writes:
we have a lazy modifier:
my $a = lazy { get_value(5, 10) };
as of r3739 implemented in Pugs. :)
The only builtin feature that needs to be added is that coroutines
can masquerade as their return value, and not a code
Hi,
because I see some people struggle to get things like GHC working, and
then to get make and a compiler working, and because some people have
limited bandwidth which makes big svn updates a less pleasant
experience, and for other reasons, I decided to have my company,
Convolution, sponsor a
If you want access, please let me know. I will send you a temporary
password by e-mail, that I expect you to change the first time you get
the chance.
I'd like one.
The box won't have an SVN mirror unless someone puts it there. There
won't be a smoke test unless someone writes the script.
Rob Kinyon skribis 2005-05-23 11:22 (-0400):
I'd like one.
Sure - just think of a nice catchy username! :)
Maybe we should divvy these tasks out. It wouldn't do that have two
people smoke-testing on the exact same machine or to have two SVN
mirrors ...
Good idea, will you take the task of
On May 23, 2005, at 7:08 AM, Ian Langworth wrote:
The test is happy when I run
it normally, and even when I run it under Devel::Cover, but it
consistently fails in our nightly test run (under Devel::Cover). As
best I can figure, Devel::Cover is slowing things down so much that my
test
On 5/23/05, Juerd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Rob Kinyon skribis 2005-05-23 11:22 (-0400):
I'd like one.
Sure - just think of a nice catchy username! :)
robkinyon please - it's catchy enough.
Maybe we should divvy these tasks out. It wouldn't do that have two
people smoke-testing on the
Hi,
I'd like one.
Sure - just think of a nice catchy username! :)
I'd like another one, as boogie. I think now, that I will use it, but I
have a lot of jobs these days, with higher priorities :( than Perl6.
dev.pugscode.org seems indicated ...
Sorry, but 'dev' isn't cute enough :).
On Mon, May 23, 2005 at 05:25:57PM +0200, Juerd wrote:
dev.pugscode.org seems indicated ...
Sorry, but 'dev' isn't cute enough :). And it's going to be
something.perl6.nl, probably. I don't mind aliases, though, but they
better be CNAMEs.
How about dev.perl6.nl -- I'll CNAME
Hi!
On Mon, May 23, 2005 at 05:18:45PM +0200, Juerd wrote:
Everyone who wants, can get a login.
me too! 'domm' please.
Also, this new machine needs a hostname. Please help me think of a cute
name! I prefer a short hostname with less than 9 letters.
onion
Access to this machine would also
On Mon, May 23, 2005 at 05:18:45PM +0200, Juerd wrote:
Hi,
Hello :)
because I see some people struggle to get things like GHC working, and
then to get make and a compiler working, and because some people have
limited bandwidth which makes big svn updates a less pleasant
experience, and for
--- Ian Langworth [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm working on a new module, Class::Agreement, and I've started by
writing the documentation. If anyone has a few minutes, I'd like some
feedback as to whether my descriptions of the concepts make sense and
if you like the syntax.
HTML:
On 5/23/05, Ovid [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In discussing the benefits, I didn't think you made a strong argument.
However, in reading the page your docs points to, I think the argument
can be improved with this:
Precondition violations mean that the client
is in error. Postcondition
Juerd,
I would like an account too, username 'stevan' please.
On May 23, 2005, at 11:25 AM, Juerd wrote:
dev.pugscode.org seems indicated ...
Sorry, but 'dev' isn't cute enough :). And it's going to be
something.perl6.nl, probably. I don't mind aliases, though, but they
better be CNAMEs.
BÁRTHÁZI András skribis 2005-05-23 17:40 (+0200):
I think, the cute name can be about animals. A camel and a parrot are in
my mind.
Parrot can't be, because that's also the name of one of the projects,
and I want to avoid confusion.
Camel -- sorry, but years of Perl still haven't convinced me
Stevan Little skribis 2005-05-23 12:00 (-0400):
I would like an account too, username 'stevan' please.
Will be arranged.
lambdacamels.perl6.nl?
I like it, but singular (as it identifies the machine itself, not its
users).
Juerd
--
http://convolution.nl/maak_juerd_blij.html
Thomas Klausner skribis 2005-05-23 18:03 (+0200):
While I will inform everyone what they need, I'm sure quite a lot
people will show up without a fresh checkout of the various
repositories. So if I can get a number of dummy accounts (to be
deleted after the event) that would be great!
Hi,
Thomas Klausner skribis 2005-05-23 18:03 (+0200):
While I will inform everyone what they need, I'm sure quite a lot
people will show up without a fresh checkout of the various
repositories. So if I can get a number of dummy accounts (to be
deleted after the event) that would be great!
Hi,
I think, the cute name can be about animals. A camel and a parrot are in
my mind.
Parrot can't be, because that's also the name of one of the projects,
and I want to avoid confusion.
I just thinking something related these animals, not the animal. Maybe
feather, etc. It's not the big
Nathan Gray skribis 2005-05-23 12:50 (-0400):
Sorry, but 'dev' isn't cute enough :). And it's going to be
something.perl6.nl, probably. I don't mind aliases, though, but they
better be CNAMEs.
Juerd, why am I getting everyone's responses, but not your original
messages?
I have no idea.
How about zephyr.
On Mon, 23 May 2005 18:55:29 +0200, Juerd [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Thomas Klausner skribis 2005-05-23 18:03 (+0200):
onion
Sorry, I had previously overlooked this lone paragraph.
I like onion the best so far.
Juerd
--
http://convolution.nl/maak_juerd_blij.html
[EMAIL PROTECTED] skribis 2005-05-23 13:58 (-0500):
I like onion the best so far.
How about zephyr.
The building my grandmother lives in is called Zephyr.
For me, the word is strongly associated with old people, and not at all
with programming :)
While an onion has many layers that
HaloO Mark,
please don't regard the following as obtrusive.
you wrote:
If as usual the definition of a right identity value e is that a op e = a for
all a,
then only +inf works. Besdies you example should have been;
Or actually $n % any( abs($n)+1 .. Inf ) to really exclude 0
from the
On 5/23/05, Juerd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Also, this new machine needs a hostname. Please help me think of a cute
name! I prefer a short hostname with less than 9 letters.
I seem to remember that the camel's name is Abigail...
--
Brent 'Dax' Royal-Gordon [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Perl and Parrot
On Mon, 23 May 2005 14:58:20 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How about zephyr.
No! That's the name of a project I'm working on dang it ;)
It reminds me of minor league baseball and roller coasters...anyway,
onion seems somehow appropriate since they also make the people kitchen
cry ;)
On Mon, 23 May 2005 21:00:51 +0200, Juerd [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] skribis 2005-05-23 13:58 (-0500):
I like onion the best so
Andy Bach wrote off-list:
Isn't Abigail the golfer, YA excellent PH, FunWithPerl, er guy?
I think camels are Fido and Amelia:
http://www.perlmonks.org/?node=31716
You're right, of course. I knew it was one of those A names...
--
Brent 'Dax' Royal-Gordon [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Perl and Parrot
Yuval Kogman wrote:
The only builtin feature that needs to be added is that coroutines
can masquerade as their return value, and not a code reference, but
AFAIK proxy objects will give us that anyway, right?
Hmm, isn't the same achieved by considering Eager and Lazy as
subtypes of Code? E.g.
Ingo Blechschmidt wrote:
am I correct in the assumption that the following is an error?
# Not in a BEGIN block
my $::(calc_varname()) = 42;
The more interesting question is: how do you expect to
adress the var in the code that follows? I guess the compiler
won't have a problem with taking
I think I may have found something wrong with PGE capturing with the :w
modifier. In this code:
.sub main @MAIN
.local pmc p6rule, rulesub, match
.local string input
input = dog spot
load_bytecode runtime/parrot/library/PGE.pbc
p6rule = find_global PGE, p6rule
Just came across something cool on the frink mailing list - was
wondering if perl6 had any intention on implementing this, or if not natively,
ideas on what would be the best way of implementing it in perl6.
They have the intent (Alan Eliasen has the intent) of implementing 'intervals'
which
There are actuall two usefull definition for %. The first which Ada calls
'mod' always returns a value 0=XN and yes it has no working value that is an
identity. The other which Ada calls 'rem' defined as follows:
Signed integer division and remainder are defined by the relation:
A =
On 5/23/05, Edward Peschko [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
They have the intent (Alan Eliasen has the intent) of implementing 'intervals'
which match fuzzy values where you know an approximate extent of the value,
but
not the value itself. E.g
(.5 ... .75) * (.5 ... .8) == (.25 ... .6)
Hi
Well... I promise not to push much the server. Although I think I will
manage to get ghc and all those things working soon, I would like an
account too, if possible. User name, ambs
Also, onion as a machine name is a good name. Domm++
Alberto
wolverian wrote:
On Mon, May 23, 2005 at
On Mon, May 23, 2005 at 12:00:14PM -0400, Stevan Little wrote:
On May 23, 2005, at 11:25 AM, Juerd wrote:
dev.pugscode.org seems indicated ...
Sorry, but 'dev' isn't cute enough :). And it's going to be
something.perl6.nl, probably. I don't mind aliases, though, but they
better be CNAMEs.
On Mon, May 23, 2005 at 06:51:31PM +0200, Juerd wrote:
Nathan Gray skribis 2005-05-23 12:50 (-0400):
Sorry, but 'dev' isn't cute enough :). And it's going to be
something.perl6.nl, probably. I don't mind aliases, though, but they
better be CNAMEs.
Juerd, why am I getting everyone's
On behalf of the Pugs team, I am elated to announce the release of
Pugs 6.2.4, with much more comprehensive OO support, hyper and reduction
metaoperators on user-defined operators, as well as experimental
coroutine support.
Also of note is `pugs.pm` and `Inline::Pugs`, two Perl 5 modules that
On Mon, May 23, 2005 at 04:14:41PM -0400, Dino Morelli wrote:
I think I may have found something wrong with PGE capturing with the :w
modifier. In this code:
[...]
You're correct, the ?ws rule wasn't working properly. I must've
been sleep deprived when I originally wrote it, as it wasn't
On behalf of the Pugs team, I am elated to announce the release of
Pugs 6.2.5, with much more comprehensive OO support, hyper and reduction
metaoperators on user-defined operators, as well as experimental
coroutine support.
Also of note is `pugs.pm` and `Inline::Pugs`, two Perl 5 modules that
On May 19, 2005, at 10:56 PM, Luke Palmer wrote:
In general, you should probably be declaring your parameters
with uppercase types, [...]
Luke
If so, wouldn't it make sense that 'int' is the boxed type (one less
keystroke) and 'Int' is the special case? Optimize for the common
case,
I've been advised to make sure I get the full names of users, not just
their nicknames and e-mail addresses, for juridical purposes.
Although this can be a rather sensitive subject for some, I've chosen to
follow the advice and require that users make their full name known.
If you don't have a
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
There are actuall two usefull definition for %. The first which Ada calls 'mod'
always returns a value 0=XN and yes it has no working value that is an
identity. The other which Ada calls 'rem' defined as follows:
Signed integer division and remainder are defined by
I would really like to see ($x div $y) be (floor($x/$y)) and ($x mod $y) be
($x - $x div $y). If the divisor is positive the modulus should be
positive, no matter what the sign of the dividend. Avoids lots of special
case code across 0 boundaries.
On 2005-05-23 18:49, TSa (Thomas Sandlaß)
On Sun, 2005-05-22 at 13:18 +0200, Leopold Toetsch wrote:
The old problem of skip, todo or let it fail.
Maybe we need pugs' test error classification scheme
I'll see what I can do with Parrot::Test.
-- c
David Storrs [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If so, wouldn't it make sense that 'int' is the boxed type (one less
keystroke) and 'Int' is the special case? Optimize for the common
case, and all that.
Think of it as being like module names--all-lowercase modules are
special (pragmata), while
With Leo's recent fixes to compile, the following now works:
.sub main @MAIN
load_bytecode languages/tcl/lib/tcllib.pbc
.local pmc tcl_compiler,compiled_sub
tcl_compiler = compreg TCL
compiled_sub = compile tcl_compiler, puts {ok 1}
compiled_sub()
.end
Additionally, at Leo's
I am curious if there are any recent slides and notes for recent talks about
Perl 6, language, how it will work, and the same for Parrot. I've caught a few
old slides from almost a year ago for a few things, but not much. I am
preparing a little presentation over here, and I'm trying to
Hi,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am curious if there are any recent slides and notes for recent talks about
Perl 6, language, how it will work, and the same for Parrot. I've caught a few
old slides from almost a year ago for a few things, but not much. I am
preparing a little presentation over
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