On Mon, Sep 3, 2018 at 10:50 PM Curt Tilmes wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 3, 2018 at 4:28 PM Parrot Raiser <1parr...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> If I understand that correctly, "die" needs to be documented as always
>> outputting the line number, and that for user-oriented messages, one
>> of the other
On Mon, Sep 3, 2018 at 4:28 PM Parrot Raiser <1parr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> If I understand that correctly, "die" needs to be documented as always
> outputting the line number, and that for user-oriented messages, one
> of the other techniques should be used.
>
die throws the Exception -- you can
If I understand that correctly, "die" needs to be documented as always
outputting the line number, and that for user-oriented messages, one
of the other techniques should be used.
Otherwise, this question is likely to come up a lot.
On Mon, Sep 03, 2018 at 11:45:58AM -0500, Stephen Wilcoxon wrote:
: Why the change in die handling between Perl 5 and 6? Suppressing line
: numbers with newline was very handy. Alternatively, adding some sort of
: directive would be more straight-forward (at least for Perl 5 users moving
: to
And the "exit" should be redundant in that case.
On Mon, Sep 3, 2018 at 1:29 PM Parrot Raiser <1parr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> But this:
>
> perl6 -e 'shell("vim sample"); exit'
>
> behaves acceptably.
>
> On 9/3/18, Parrot Raiser <1parr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Is Windows really that brain-dead?
But this:
perl6 -e 'shell("vim sample"); exit'
behaves acceptably.
On 9/3/18, Parrot Raiser <1parr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Is Windows really that brain-dead? Pity it has to sabotage everyone else.
>
> This invokes vim successfully, but leaves an ugly error message around:
>
> perl6 -e 'exit
fork/exec is a Unix-specific idiom.
shell throws (well, produces a Failure that is thrown when sunk), so you
don't need the exit.
On Mon, Sep 3, 2018 at 1:10 PM Parrot Raiser <1parr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Is Windows really that brain-dead? Pity it has to sabotage everyone else.
>
> This invokes
Is Windows really that brain-dead? Pity it has to sabotage everyone else.
This invokes vim successfully, but leaves an ugly error message around:
perl6 -e 'exit shell("vim sample")'
No such method 'Int' for invocant of type 'Proc'
in block at -e line 1
On 9/3/18, Brandon Allbery wrote:
>
It's not basic: Windows doesn't have it at all, it has to be simulated. The
intent is that system dependent things like that should be external to the
core.
On Mon, Sep 3, 2018 at 12:56 PM Parrot Raiser <1parr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Thanks for the reply. That didn't show up with any search
Thanks for the reply. That didn't show up with any search string I
could contrive.
It's disappointing to lose a basic ability like handing over control
to another program.
On 9/3/18, Elizabeth Mattijsen wrote:
> https://docs.perl6.org/language/5to6-perlfunc#exec
>
>> On 3 Sep 2018, at 18:41,
Why the change in die handling between Perl 5 and 6? Suppressing line
numbers with newline was very handy. Alternatively, adding some sort of
directive would be more straight-forward (at least for Perl 5 users moving
to Perl 6).
On Mon, Sep 3, 2018 at 11:32 AM, Elizabeth Mattijsen wrote:
>
https://docs.perl6.org/language/5to6-perlfunc#exec
> On 3 Sep 2018, at 18:41, Parrot Raiser <1parr...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> In Perl 5, a program can hand over control to another with exec:
> https://perldoc.perl.org/functions/exec.html
> e.g perl -e 'exec vim' opens up vim
>
> What's the Perl
In Perl 5, a program can hand over control to another with exec:
https://perldoc.perl.org/functions/exec.html
e.g perl -e 'exec vim' opens up vim
What's the Perl 6 equivalent?
note “message”; exit
> On 3 Sep 2018, at 18:03, Parrot Raiser <1parr...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> perl6 -v
> This is Rakudo Star version 2018.06 built on MoarVM version 2018.06
> implementing Perl 6.c.
>
> In Perl 5:
> die "Message"; outputs Message, followed by the program line number.
> die
perl6 -v
This is Rakudo Star version 2018.06 built on MoarVM version 2018.06
implementing Perl 6.c.
In Perl 5:
die "Message"; outputs Message, followed by the program line number.
die "Message\n" outputs Message
without further ado.
Perl 6 "die" produces line numbers regardless of the line
Perhaps it’s better to make this a zef issue on Github?
> On 3 Sep 2018, at 02:50, Peter Scott wrote:
>
> Hullo. I am on
>
> CentOS Linux release 7.5.1804 (Core)
>
> and I did
>
> yum install rakudo[rakudo-0.2018.04-1.el7]
> yum install rakudo-zef
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