I mean the number to the left of quad-cr. :-)

Regards,
Elias
On 21 May 2014 20:28, "Juergen Sauermann" <juergen.sauerm...@t-online.de>
wrote:

>  Hi Elias,
>
> not sure what you mean by 'CR-level' ?
>
> /// Jürgen
>
>
> On 05/21/2014 06:32 AM, Elias Mårtenson wrote:
>
> Hello Jürgen,
>
>  I finally got around to attempting to implement this.
>
>  What I'm actually doing is to ensure that the output in a trace buffer
> (that displays the content of a variable in real-time) is not wrapped. This
> is, of course, because Emacs allows you to navigate around a larger buffer.
>
>  Currently, I'm simply calling the function do_CR which accepts a number
> being the CR-level that I want to use for display. When using your
> suggestion above, I effectively need to reimplement do_CR, which is
> actually somewhat complex.
>
>  Do you think it would be possible to alter the definition of do_CR so
> that it accepts the CR-level as an argument so that I don't have to
> copy&paste all that code into the Emacs module?
>
>  Regards,
> Elias
>
>
> On 18 February 2014 18:36, Elias Mårtenson <loke...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Thank you. This is a lot better.
>>
>>  I was doing that just because I didn't see a better way to do it.
>> Clearly, this is a better way to do it. :-)
>>
>>  Regards,
>>  Elias
>>
>>
>> On 18 February 2014 18:34, Juergen Sauermann <
>> juergen.sauerm...@t-online.de> wrote:
>>
>>>  Hi Elias,
>>>
>>> normally you do something like this:
>>>
>>> // const Value & value;
>>>
>>> PrintContext pctx(style, Workspace::get_PP(), Workspace::get_CT(),
>>> Workspace::get_PW());
>>> PrintBuffer pb(value, pctx);
>>> UCS_string ucs(pb, value.get_rank(), pctx.get_PW());
>>> ...
>>>
>>> You can use your own ⎕PW value instead of Workspace::get_PW() above.
>>>
>>> It is generally a bad idea if programs or functions other then the
>>> interpreter itself modify the data structures
>>> of the interpreter because the functions of the interpreter make certain
>>> assumptions regarding the state of
>>> its data structures. If other functions modify these data structures,
>>> then it becomes impossible for me to
>>> maintain the interpreter.
>>>
>>> /// Jürgen
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On 02/18/2014 04:58 AM, Elias Mårtenson wrote:
>>>
>>> In my native code, I would like to be able to get a printable
>>> representation of a Value_P as if ⎕PW was set to some very large value
>>> (effectively unlimited).
>>>
>>>  What is the most efficient way to do this?
>>>
>>>  I was trying to call assign on the return value from
>>> Workspace::get_v_Quad_PW(), but I got a DOMAIN ERROR (I suppose I made
>>> some silly mistake somewhere though) but I don't think that might be the
>>> best way to it.
>>>
>>>  Regards,
>>> Elias
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>
>

Reply via email to