On Wed, Sep 21, 2016 at 05:48:51PM +0100, Nick Warne wrote:
> Was going to use this to monitor battery, but HUNK #10 fails - looking
> at the patch and dwm.c, the code is totally different at around line
> 664:
Are you using the tagged 6.1 release or 6.1/HEAD? My version of the
patch applies clean
On Wed, Sep 21, 2016, at 12:10 PM, Nick Warne wrote:
> One little thing I do miss though is scrolling with mouse wheel (or
> using the pad side edge) to scroll a web page etc.
> Is that doable?
If I had a mouse wheel I'd let you know how I do it, but I don't. I use
a track ball. I wonder if the
On Wed, Sep 21, 2016 at 8:48 AM, Nick Warne wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Was going to use this to monitor battery, but HUNK #10 fails - looking
> at the patch and dwm.c, the code is totally different at around line
> 664:
>
> Hunk #7 succeeded at 292.
> Hunk #8 succeeded at 516.
> Hunk #9 succeeded at 566
networkmanager should be removed first thing on any distribution
slack doesn't sound so great if it includes some crap tbh.
On 9/21/16, Nick Warne wrote:
> Hi Cág
>
> On Wed, 21 Sep 2016 21:10:42 +0100
> Cág wrote:
>
>
>> Nice to see Slackware people here.
>
> We are everywhere ;) Just Slack ne
Hi Cág
On Wed, 21 Sep 2016 21:10:42 +0100
Cág wrote:
> Nice to see Slackware people here.
We are everywhere ;) Just Slack never breaks so you don't see us :)
> > One little thing I do miss though is scrolling with mouse wheel (or
> > using the pad side edge) to scroll a web page etc.
> >
>
try libinput instead of older evdev/synaptics stuff for both
trackpoint and touchpads. it works great on thinkpads.
Speaking of showing off, I set up a repository where I publish my
dotfiles and desktop patches [0].
I just patched dmenu_run to cleanly exec whatever it's supposed to run.
cheers!
mar77i
[0] https://github.com/mar77i/dotfiles
Nick Warne wrote:
Hi,
Nice to see Slackware people here.
One little thing I do miss though is scrolling with mouse wheel (or
using the pad side edge) to scroll a web page etc.
Is that doable?
Try some of these [0]. Of course apply what fits you. There are some
example
files I use now [1],
On Wed, 21 Sep 2016 11:27:40 -0400
Greg Reagle wrote:
> Speaking of just discovering dwm, I started using it several months
> ago, and I have found that the systray patch for dwm [1] or the
> stalonetray program [2] are very useful for showing my volume
> control, dropbox status, and network icon
Hi all,
Was going to use this to monitor battery, but HUNK #10 fails - looking
at the patch and dwm.c, the code is totally different at around line
664:
Hunk #7 succeeded at 292.
Hunk #8 succeeded at 516.
Hunk #9 succeeded at 566.
Hunk #10 FAILED at 664.
Hunk #11 succeeded at 744 (offset -5 lines
Hi Greg,
On Wed, 21 Sep 2016 11:27:40 -0400
Greg Reagle wrote:
> Speaking of just discovering dwm, I started using it several months
> ago, and I have found that the systray patch for dwm [1] or the
> stalonetray program [2] are very useful for showing my volume
> control, dropbox status, and ne
On Wed, Sep 21, 2016 at 3:02 AM, Ivan Tham wrote:
> Hi, Stephen.
>
> On Tue, Sep 20, 2016 at 04:32:18PM -0400, stephen Turner wrote:
>>
>> Bash and Make, I'm looking for compatible replacements for these. As i
>> currently understand it bash at the least is expected to compile the linux
>> kernel.
On Tue, Sep 20, 2016 at 4:44 PM, FRIGN wrote:
> On Tue, 20 Sep 2016 16:32:18 -0400
> stephen Turner wrote:
>
> Hey Stephen,
>
>> On your site i see you have tested compiling your system with PCC
>> and i also see a SCC in dev. What was the reason you chose to write
>> SCC? Is it due to PCC's reli
For context, the message I replied to, but forgot to
quote was Markus saying he will arrive and be at the
lobby around noon on the welcome day (Friday).
On Wed, 21 Sep 2016 16:49:54 +0200
Mattias Andrée wrote:
> I'll be arrive in the afternoon the day before.
> I'll meet you in the lobby around
Speaking of just discovering dwm, I started using it several months ago,
and I have found that the systray patch for dwm [1] or the stalonetray
program [2] are very useful for showing my volume control, dropbox
status, and network icon.
[1] http://dwm.suckless.org/patches/systray
[2] http://stalon
On Wed, Sep 21, 2016, at 10:45 AM, Evan Gates wrote:
> Sadly there are two implementations.
Yes, you're right. We already had this conversation about the two rc's
[1] [2] and the consensus on this list is to prefer the Plan 9 version.
So I meant the Plan 9 version in my previous messages. It is
On Tue, Sep 20, 2016 at 11:02 PM, FRIGN wrote:
> Of course, given there is only one implementation, it is highly
> portable per-se, given the interpretation is equal everywhere and 9base
> is quite easily portable.
Sadly there are two implementations. This rc[0] claims to be a
reimplementation fo
I'll be arrive in the afternoon the day before.
I'll meet you in the lobby around noon.
pgpbrPez0jjo4.pgp
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
He answered your reply on G+.
https://plus.google.com/+AlanCoxLinux/posts/a2jAP7Pz1gj
> Having looked deeper I think the suckless code is too buggy
Sad :(
Should Alan Cox be added to this mailing list thread as CC for more discussion,
details about the bugs he found and (who knows) solutions?
stephen Turner wrote:
Bash and Make, I'm looking for compatible replacements for these.
mksh can be used as #!/bin/sh and has more features than dash
for a convenient everyday use.
For make there's bmake[0], NetBSD make ported to Linux.
Cág
[0]: http://www.crufty.net/help/sjg/bmake.html
I went ahead and relayed projects you mentioned. :-)
cheers!
mar77i
> was wondering if there was a new linux kernel cleanup project somewhere?
Alan Cox started work on this at 2014 and keeps developing the project until
today.
His announcement on 2014 -
https://plus.google.com/+AlanCoxLinux/posts/a2jAP7Pz1gj
The code last updated 5 days ago - https://github.co
Hi, Stephen.
On Tue, Sep 20, 2016 at 04:32:18PM -0400, stephen Turner wrote:
Bash and Make, I'm looking for compatible replacements for these. As i
currently understand it bash at the least is expected to compile the linux
kernel. Is there any suitable projects that you may have seen around the
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