Hello,
FWIW, I have put two versions I found under kergis.com downloads zone:
http://downloads.kergis.com/misc/apl4_0.tar.gz
and
http://downloads.kergis.com/misc/apl4_3.tar.gz
The version number is relative to the BSD version it was released with.
The 4.0 has a cat1 man page mentioning Ken Th
Hello,
I'm wondering about the history of the 68000 compiler/tools. Support for the
68020 makes sense, it had an MMU, but 68000 did not. And it had some design
flaws that prevented it from working correctly with the external MMU, the
68451. So why does/did Plan 9 have a 68000 compiler? Did
> On Feb 22, 2021, at 8:41 PM, o...@eigenstate.org wrote:
>
> Quoth Lyndon Nerenberg (VE7TFX/VE6BBM) :
>> Steffen Nurpmeso writes:
>>
>>> It can even be as small as
>>>
>>> #?0|kent:unix-hist$ du -sh .
>>> 179M.
>>>
>>> when not including all the new FreeBSD things (for which i at
>>>
o...@eigenstate.org writes:
> git clone --single-branch \
> --branch Research-V4-Snapshot-Development \
I must be blind. I completely glossed over 'single-branch'.
But I might have to go back to the SCCS archive on the CDs,
anyway, since Spinellis' repo doesn't seem to ha
Quoth David du Colombier <0in...@gmail.com>:
> > When I got git9 working on 9legacy, I backported a couple
> > of utilities and changes:
> >
> > /n/sources/patch/walk
> > /n/sources/patch/rc-line-split
>
> These patches are now part of 9legacy. Thanks!
>
thank you :)
let me kno
Quoth Lyndon Nerenberg (VE7TFX/VE6BBM) :
> Steffen Nurpmeso writes:
>
> > It can even be as small as
> >
> > #?0|kent:unix-hist$ du -sh .
> > 179M.
> >
> > when not including all the new FreeBSD things (for which i at
> > least track the FreeBSD git repository directly):
>
> Okay, so wha
My first reaction is that an RNN-based code generator trained on a
particular dataset (e.g. Plan 9 sources) might be more fruitful.
On Mon, Feb 22, 2021 at 3:08 PM William Linkmeyer wrote:
> Dearest Nines,
>
> I’ve been reading these email chains for about three years now. You’ve all
> taught me
Steffen Nurpmeso writes:
> It can even be as small as
>
> #?0|kent:unix-hist$ du -sh .
> 179M.
>
> when not including all the new FreeBSD things (for which i at
> least track the FreeBSD git repository directly):
Okay, so what's the magic incantation to clone just that subset
of branches
Clearly someone ran lint on the ucb code :-) Both have the iline variable
(char* on Cain's version, unsigned char* in ucb).
> On Feb 22, 2021, at 3:56 PM, Charles Forsyth
> wrote:
>
> It's more interesting that one is immediate by inspection. But why?
>
> On Mon, Feb 22, 2021 at 11:10 PM Bakul
Bakul Shah wrote in
<5c11a3ac-a66c-4336-bf37-55db2c4eb...@iitbombay.org>:
|Spinellis has put together a browsable repo based on various source \
|distributions
|which I find useful. I keep a local copy as it is under 2GB. All I \
It can even be as small as
#?0|kent:unix-hist$ du -sh .
17
It's more interesting that one is immediate by inspection. But why?
On Mon, Feb 22, 2021 at 11:10 PM Bakul Shah wrote:
> Spinellis has put together a browsable repo based on various source
> distributions
> which I find useful. I keep a local copy as it is under 2GB. All I had to
> do was
>
> gi
Spinellis has put together a browsable repo based on various source
distributions
which I find useful. I keep a local copy as it is under 2GB. All I had to do
was
git log | less -ip "ross harvey"
Michael Cain's version on sigapl.org site seems to be a different fork. Also
worked
over quite a
Dearest Nines,
I’ve been reading these email chains for about three years now. You’ve all
taught me quite a bit. I understand that this will be a bit off-topic as it’s
not directly related to Plan9. So be it. I wanted to start a chain and chime in
on something that I do have experience with.
I’
It's amusing that the github has "42 years ago".
You can tell instantly that the line
if (TERMtype == 0)c = (int)*iline++;
wasn't written by Thompson.
On Mon, Feb 22, 2021 at 10:02 PM Bakul Shah wrote:
> On Feb 22, 2021, at 10:28 AM, tlaro...@polynum.com wrote:
> >
> > There are various version
On Feb 22, 2021, at 10:28 AM, tlaro...@polynum.com wrote:
>
> There are various versions of an APL interpreter and, amongst these,
> a version by Ken Thompson, Ross Harvey, Douglas Lanam.
This can be found in Diomidis Spinellis' unix history repo @
https://github.com/dspinellis/unix-history-repo
I'm fairly sure Thompson wrote it on sabbatical in Berkeley. I think he
also wrote the first version of a Pascal compiler.
Pascal isn't a difficult language but I remember that compiler having an
unusual style. I think others reworked it significantly later,
so if it's there at all it's worth looki
tlaro...@polynum.com writes:
> There are various versions of an APL interpreter and, amongst these,
> a version by Ken Thompson, Ross Harvey, Douglas Lanam.
>
> Is that this one you are looking for?
That sounds like the one. It's entirely possible the version I
started with came from one of the
> When I got git9 working on 9legacy, I backported a couple
> of utilities and changes:
>
> /n/sources/patch/walk
> /n/sources/patch/rc-line-split
These patches are now part of 9legacy. Thanks!
--
David du Colombier
--
9fans: 9fans
Permal
Hello,
I have the CSRG Archives CDROM set, with archives from 1978 to 1993
and final 4.4 and 4.4BSD-Lite2.
There are various versions of an APL interpreter and, amongst these,
a version by Ken Thompson, Ross Harvey, Douglas Lanam.
Is that this one you are looking for?
Apparently Caldera has gra
j...@corpus-callosum.com wrote:
> Lyndon,
>
> Let us know if you find that source as it unfortunately doesn't appear to be
> on netlib.org.
>
> P.S. Yes I know there are a million other APLs out there, as
> well as J and the assorted follow-ons. It's the V7 code I'm
> specifically interested in
Lyndon,
Let us know if you find that source as it unfortunately doesn't appear to be on
netlib.org.
P.S. Yes I know there are a million other APLs out there, as
well as J and the assorted follow-ons. It's the V7 code I'm
specifically interested in. Maybe it's tucked away in the
bitsaver archi
21 matches
Mail list logo