Thomas Bushnell, BSG said: > "Brian T. Sniffen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > >> Nonsense. I edit multiple images into a single image all the time, >> but rarely save an XCF file: multiple layers live in the >> image-editor's memory, but never hit the disk. There is no persistent >> form which represents "source" any more than there is for a wood >> carving or a painting. > > There is, but you delete them. > > This is exactly parallel to writing Scheme code in an online Scheme > system, but never saving it, and then at the end, writing out a > standalone executable, quitting, and destroying the source. > > The fact that it may be common practice to destroy the source in image > editors is lamentable, but doesn't change the relationship of the > parts.
It certainly does: if there is no persistent form, it isn't the source. Otherwise, the elisp code which is generated (and used, but usually never seen) by programmers writing C in Emacs would have to be distributed as part of the "build scripts" -- I don't have to distribute C-mode, the current region stack, or ephemeral keyboard macros with my C programs, right? I'm not entirely convinced it *always* applies, but in general it seems that persistent storage is a good rule of thumb for identifying source. If I didn't save it to work on later, it isn't source, but a single act of creation. -Brian -- Brian Sniffen [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.evenmere.org/~bts/