[9fans] The developers of Plan9 think there was no point in coding in binary code three years ago as they did or make the Riga Technical University and University of Latvia?
What are the programming languages that were used to develop the Plan9? Probably the Riga Technical University and University of Latvia continue teaching coding in binary code, ie, machine language. I say this because about three years ago the Riga Technical University and University of Latvia continued teaching coding in binary code, ie, machine language. The Riga Technical University and University of Latvia made based projects in Plan9 using coding in binary code? The developers of Plan9 think there was no point in coding in binary code three years ago as they did or make the Riga Technical University and University of Latvia?
Re: [9fans] The developers of Plan9 think there was no point in coding in binary code three years ago as they did or make the Riga Technical University and University of Latvia?
2014-08-14 13:12 GMT-03:00, smi...@icebubble.org : > françai s writes: > >> I say this because about three years ago the Riga Technical University > > YOU cannot say anything, because you are a spam bot advertising for "the > Riga Technical University and University of Latvia" and not a sentient > being. > In this e-mail, the ratio of spelling errors to grammatical errors is > zero. That's a dead giveaway that it's a bot. If it were written by a > human, it would have mroe typos and speelling errors. I am a human, my native language is not English, please forgive me the errors of English.
Re: [9fans] The developers of Plan9 think there was no point in coding in binary code three years ago as they did or make the Riga Technical University and University of Latvia?
2014-08-13 14:48 GMT-03:00, Aleksandar Kuktin : > > Is there a reason "Riga Technical University" and "University of > Latvia" are mentioned in every sentence? What exactly is the purpose of > this e-mail? Advertising? Fishing? Is this an automated "shotgun" > e-mail designed to extract some information from the 'Net? An AI test? I thought that never hear someone say that there sense currently uses of binary code. One person told me that there are three or more years ago the University of Latvia and Riga Technical University taught code in binary. I like both this subject that is irresistible to me, who are better than the developers of Plan 9, the successor to Unix from AT & T to address this issue? I doubt if there is better people than the developers of Plan9 to answer that.
Re: [9fans] The developers of Plan9 think there was no point in coding in binary code three years ago as they did or make the Riga Technical University and University of Latvia?
2014-08-14 19:30 GMT-03:00, Skip Tavakkolian : > i've forwarded your request to SP9SS (i may be missing an S in there > somewhere) for their immediate attention. they assure me it will be taken > up at the next special session of the central committee. > > personally i think binary is passé. i'm waiting for processors that are > base "some large prime" -- preferably one that i can change on a whim. i > think this class of modulo-large-prime processors would make systems very > safe at the expense of a little work on the assembler every time the base > changes. perhaps UoL and RTU should start preparing students for this next > chapter in computing and help students avoid being SoL landing a dream tech > job with a BBTC (big-behemoth-tech-company) > > > > On Thu, Aug 14, 2014 at 3:06 PM, françai s wrote: > >> 2014-08-13 14:48 GMT-03:00, Aleksandar Kuktin : >> >> > >> > Is there a reason "Riga Technical University" and "University of >> > Latvia" are mentioned in every sentence? What exactly is the purpose of >> > this e-mail? Advertising? Fishing? Is this an automated "shotgun" >> > e-mail designed to extract some information from the 'Net? An AI test? >> >> >> I thought that never hear someone say that there sense currently >> uses of binary code. >> >> One person told me that there are three or more years ago the >> University of Latvia and Riga Technical University taught code in >> binary. >> >> I like both this subject that is irresistible to me, who are better >> than the developers of Plan 9, the successor to Unix from AT & T to >> address this issue? >> >> I doubt if there is better people than the developers of Plan9 to answer >> that. >> >> > Skip Tavakkolian wrote: >i've forwarded your request to SP9SS (i may be missing an S in there >somewhere) >for their >immediate attention. they assure me it will be taken up >at the next special >session of the >central committee. My topic has been moved to another list? If my topic has been moved to another list, please give me the link of my topic that was moved.
[9fans] [OFF-TOPIC] For most programmers, it is foolish currently develop in machine code, hexadecimal and assembly?
It is written in the introduction C - A programming language Ansi standard written by Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie: For most programmers, the most important change is a new syntax for declaring and defining functions. For most programmers, it is foolish currently develop in machine code, hexadecimal and assembly? There are different opinions on this?
[9fans] How the Plan9 developers solve problems that are not resolved by Assembly?
I think that the only case where you have to resort to writing binary code manually is when the assembler cannot output the desired code for some reason. If I recall correctly, there is only one such case in the HelenOS sources: http://trac.helenos.org/browser/mainline/kernel/arch/mips32/include/debug.h?rev=mainline%2C1446.3.1 Here they manually encode the opcodes of five special debugging instructions for the MSIM MIPS simulator (these instructions are not part of the standard MIPS ISA, thus the assembler does not know them). But the developers of FreeBSD not write binary code manually. How the Plan9 developers solve problems that are not resolved by Assembly?
[9fans] [OFF-TOPIC] It is true that is impossible write in binary code, the lowest level of programming that you can write is in hexadecimal code?
I intend to write in lowest level of computer programming as a hobby. It is true that is impossible write in binary code, the lowest level of programming that you can write is in hexadecimal code? What is the lowest level of programming computers that you can write ? Is binary code? Is hex code? Is another machine code? Honestly do not know if it is true that there is another machine code beyond the binary and hex code. Is Assembly?
[9fans] Administrators and moderators of 9fans list, please erase all the messages that I not should have posted here in 9fans list!
Administrators and moderators of 9fans list, please erase all the messages that I not should have posted here in 9fans list. I ask this because I probably be in future a good programmer famous and I do not want to talk about the topics that I should not have posted here in 9fans list. I decided prevent substantial harm to important relationships that probably I will have in future with other developers.