Ken:
Your question is an interesting one. My answer may serve as a word to
the wise: I do my Clojure source-code editing in Emacs (actually
Aquamacs, but the difference is not important for what I am saying
here). As any Emacs user knows, when one has several Emacs frames
(windows) in action and is hurriedly (and maybe also carelessly) moving
back and forth among them, he sometimes starts typing for a change he
wants to make in one frame when the point (cursor) is actually sitting
in a frame different from the one in which he intends to be making the
change. Usually, such a false start can quickly be caught and
corrected, but I suspect that in this case I made such a false start and
didn't fully correct for it.
--Larry
On 3/12/11 9:09 PM, Ken Wesson wrote:
On Sat, Mar 12, 2011 at 9:46 PM, Larry Travis<tra...@cs.wisc.edu> wrote:
Ken:
The cause of my difficulty indeed was a corrupted file. I was looking for it
in a completely different direction, and I clearly don't know how to
correctly parse Java error messages!
Thank you very much for sharing your cleverness and your expertise.
You're welcome. (But ... the file was actually *corrupted*? How did
*that* happen?)
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