Hi,
the nature of a summary is to omit the details.
In addition to the number of missing header files (at the end of the output)
you get the information which header files are missing further up in the
output.
In your example below:
checking for fftw3.h... (cached) no
IOW: the count displayed at the end is simply the number of header
file that have failed.
Best Regards,
Jürgen
On 7/1/24 19:41, enz...@gmx.com wrote:
Hi
i have another suggestion for the configure summary
in the configure output i get
checking for fftw3.h... (cached) no
└──── will affect: ⎕FFT
disabled by: --with-pcre=no
└──── will affect: ⎕RE
checking for GTK... no - (explicitly disabled by user)
└──── may affect: ⎕PLOT, will affect ⎕PNG
in the configure summary i get
apl_missing_headers: 1
i assume this is referring to the missing fftw3
why not list what header(s) the apl_missing_headers is referring to in addition
to the number
On Mon, 1 Jul 2024 12:08:50 +0200
Dr. Jürgen Sauermann <m...@xn--jrgen-sauermann-zvb.de> wrote:
Hi,
yes it is a snapshot of the current SVN.
No need to do anything if you update via SVN.
Best Regards,
Jürgen
On 6/30/24 18:55, enz...@gmx.com wrote:
Hi,
is this apl-1.9.tar.gz just a tar.gz of the current svn or something labelled
as a reak 'stable' release?
since i assume you will be doing 'releases' from now on (?) - maybe calling it
apl-2.0 would have been a better version number to start this new release
scheme with rather then apl-1.9?
a suggestion - add something to the configure summary to make note what the
configure was for - libapl or python3/lib_gnu_apl etc
like you are doing with apl_POSTGRES:
apl_APL: [yes/no]
apl_LIBAPL: [yes/no]
apl_PYTHON: [yes/np]
configure --with-python -> your Makefile.am is 'hardcoded' for
'-I/usr/include/python3.6m -I/usr/include/python3.8'
i didn't see any information for compiling with different python versions and
installation locations (for Python.h) that would require using CPPFLAGS for
different installation locations and newer python versions
configure CPPFLAGS='-I/usr/local/include/python3.10' ...... for my
particular python3.10 installation
On Sun, 30 Jun 2024 13:41:38 +0200
Dr. Jürgen Sauermann <m...@xn--jrgen-sauermann-zvb.de> wrote:
Hi,
I am happy to announce that *GNU APL 1.9* has been released.
GNU APL is a free implementation of the ISO standard 13751 aka.
"Programming Language APL, Extended".
The 1.9 release contains:
* Bug fixes
Have fun!
Dr. Jürgen Sauermann
Author and Maintainer of GNU APL
P.S. Some redundant distribution formats of GNU APL (RMPs, windows)
are no longer supported. The best way of using GNU APL is to fetch it from
the savannah SVN and GIT archives (see https://www.gnu.org/software/apl ).
These archives are, unlike the less frequent GNU APL releases, always
up-to-date and in sync with the ongoing GNU APL development.