On Wed, Nov 09, 2005 at 05:57:22PM -1000, Joshua Hoblitt said:
> I've taken a look at using Module::Pluggable to register configure
> steps. The simplest way to do this is to let Module::Pluggable search
> through the ./config directory. This requires renaming all of the .pl
> configure files to
Noticed this on another list and figured it might be a p6i kind of thing
...
"Fine-grained concurrency primitives from Erlang now available in
Python. Haven't used Erlang myself, though I've read the papers. Looks
kind of like a bastard offspring of Linda and more explicit sync
constructions /
On Fri, Aug 20, 2004 at 08:38:21AM -0400, Matt Diephouse said:
> That's me. I don't think I ever announced this to the list though. Any
> newbie lurkers can check it out: http://matt.diephouse.com/parrot
"The rest of the bytecode is made up of objects. Objects are preceeded
by a char denoting the
On Wed, Aug 18, 2004 at 09:21:22AM +0200, Leopold Toetsch said:
> Rather not. Python is AFAIK not as portable as Perl. But there is a Perl
> based make somewhere, the named just escaped my mind.
It's called Cons. I can't remember whether Cons or Scons came first
(ah, Cons was the orginal http://
On Wed, Mar 31, 2004 at 01:54:35PM +0200, Leopold Toetsch said:
> > Probably select have been called without timeout.
>
> Yes that's true. But the event thread wakes up the io_thread (s.
> stop_io_thread). This seems to fail with PTH as it doesn't preempt.
>
> Looking at the code, this seems to h
On Mon, Mar 22, 2004 at 09:54:56AM -0500, Butler, Gerald said:
> The important point is that the starting language must have semantics which
> treat variables, object, etc. as abstract entities to be manipulated not
> *memory locations* to be accessed arbitrarily. Then, the parse stage must spit
>
Very possibly old and useless but in the grand tradition of piping up
with ideas which may or may not be useful -
http://home.pipeline.com/~hbaker1/CheneyMTA.html
being a paper on filling the C stack completely thus saving on some GC
amongst other things.
The paper explains it much better.
Si
I'm not sure if the tutorial has gone anywhere but I cam across this
earlier which may be useful as a start.
Something about using TreeCC would be nice as well.
http://www.flipcode.com/tutorials/tut_scr01.shtml
--
the test for truth is still quicker than the addition
On Tue, Jan 21, 2003 at 12:14:29PM +0100, K Stol said:
> PHP is especially used in web pages. Would there be any advantage to have a
> PHP->Parrot compiler?
Depends what you mean by 'advantage'.
Currently, as far as I know, PHP runs on a virtual machine, just like
Perl so it's a good candidate f
On Tue, Jan 21, 2003 at 09:17:56AM +0100, K Stol said:
> A few weeks ago I posted something about a Tcl->parrot compiler, but Will Coleda
>already was working on such a project. It would be a as a final project for my
>bachelor's. But because such already exists, I'm looking for something else.
On Thu, Jan 16, 2003 at 11:25:34AM -0800, Tupshin Harper said:
> The ability to download autodia off of the primary site and the mirror
> is unfortunately broken.
Fwd-d to the author and apparently it's fixed now.
Simon
On Wed, Oct 09, 2002 at 07:17:01PM -0400, Dan Sugalski said:
> I'll see about getting some of the internal structures diagrammed
> better, which is the only place things are a little dodgy, but that's
> otherwise fine.
[accidentally sent to Robert Spier ony earlier]
Autodia (http://www.droogs.
On Sun, Jul 14, 2002 at 08:54:30PM +0300, Iacob Alin said:
> The guys from London.pm wrote Scribot (http://www.scribot.com/) wich could
> be more useful...
Yeah I know - Leon wrote the original and then I patched it :)
http://thegestalt.org/simon/perl/scribot2.html
Leon's done another revision
On Sat, Jul 13, 2002 at 05:00:42PM -0400, Jim Cromie said:
> can we could invent a super-lightweight markup language
> that #parrot-eers would type into the stream to put meta-info into it ?
Might it be worth using something like
http://usefulinc.com/chump/
(as seen in use at http://pants.hedd
14 matches
Mail list logo