On 10/25/14 13:41, F Hssn wrote:
Following suckless's minimal philosophy, I'd be interested to find out
if someone has done analysis on how an even minimal browser could be
developed in terms of SLOC, since webkit (r172694) stands at ~2
million lines, 75% of which is C++, while webkitgtk-1.10.2 i
Was working for me a few weeks ago; just tried right now and I got the
message right away. Check your filters/message IDs?
On 9/17/14, 3:51 PM, Teodoro Santoni wrote:
> Welp, you made it, i'm hooking the bait. You're putting the editor out every
> single goddamn time someone discusses about text editors:
So... twice?
On 9/15/14, 3:03 PM, Marc André Tanner wrote:
> This is true to some degree. The problem is that most people are already
> familiar with vi(m) (myself included). Therefore the hope is that by sticking
> to the vim conventions more contributors will be attracted. As for my personal
> needs they are
FYI, anyone building on OpenBSD (and possibly other BSDs), add
-D_BSD_SOURCE to CFLAGS in config.mk for SIGWINCH.
Hi Marc,
Thank you for the thorough and illustrated RFC. If you have not already
done so, I suggest you keep this text around with the project.
> Notice that the common case of appending text to a given piece is fast
> since, the new data is simply appended to the buffer and the piece length
> is
I wrap it with stunnel.
On 8/17/14, 7:38 PM, Alexander Huemer wrote:
> Well, as you may notice it's quite important for some people to get this
> message through. You should be glad that there are people who give
> advice. This advice is, once again: Don't use OSX, don't port good
> software to OSX (and Windows).
Sorr
On 8/17/14, 3:47 PM, FRIGN wrote:
> The world you're living in is the walled garden of OS X.
> It's your choice to either attempt to improve it, which is futile, or
> enter a world in which improvement is possible in the first place.
I have to use OS X sometimes for work. It's still a general-purp
On 7/23/14, 3:52 PM, Calvin Morrison wrote:
> That's just silly. Why would you be so sucky of any admin to require
> users to change passwords on 10 systems when they are all identical?
> This is somewhat of a small cluster, worker nodes, a services node, a
> storage node, a head node etc.
Users a
On 7/23/14, 3:29 PM, Dimitris Papastamos wrote:
> Are these scripts somewhere publicly available? I'd like to have a
> look if possible.
No, but I'll clean them up a little later this week. They're really
nothing special; all my machines run Linux, so it's just
useradd/usermod/userdel and some fl
On 7/23/14, 3:21 PM, Calvin Morrison wrote:
> LDAP sucks, is there any good alternative for managing user logins
> over 5-10 servers?
I declare one server the master and manage accounts through there with
some simple scripts and ssh.
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On 7/8/14, 8:27 PM, Dimitris Zervas wrote:
> I know that some of you will really hate me about this, but I patched sandy
> to have command and insert mode.
Actually, this was all that kept me from using sandy. (Well, I suppose
my unwillingness to change my habits is what kept me...)
Please keep
You may be interested in fugitive[0], blog software using Git hooks.
[0] https://gitorious.org/fugitive
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On 5/4/14, 3:25 PM, Manolo Martínez wrote:
> Video calls are nice, though.
Don't feed the troll, please.
I would disagree about "worse", but we're really comparing Ebola to
Marburg at this point.
No because the site is not run on node.js and mongodb.
On Sat, 10 Aug 2013 10:37:30 +0200 "Roberto E. Vargas Caballero"
wrote:
> The solution is easy,
> don't add the newline when there is a character in the last position
> of the row.
This isn't the desired behavior when you fill the line up with exactly
the right number of characters. Just an edge
On Sat, 6 Jul 2013 10:59:36 -0400 Alex Pilon wrote:
> On Sat, Jul 06, 2013 at 01:29:02PM +0200, Dmitrij Czarkoff wrote:
> > Apparently is there anybody who uses dashes in tar's keys?
>
> Yeah. Old habit.
I also see it a lot in scripts, along with using full options instead
of short--perhaps to b
On Sun, 30 Jun 2013 11:05:41 +0200 Markus Wichmann
wrote:
> I can see, that Xorg is a very complex implementation of the X11
> protocol, and that that protocoll is not very good, seeing as how it
> was extended several times, the extensions oftentimes being
> incompatible with each other (e.g. Xin
On Sat, 29 Jun 2013 17:11:42 -0400 Jacob Todd
wrote:
> how is that good news? that's horrible news.
(That's the joke.)
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On Sat, 29 Jun 2013 00:17:14 +1000 oneofthem
wrote:
> You're really saying that cryptography hasn't changed since 2007?
> SSL is a bad example because it was superseded by TLS 1.0 over a
> decade ago, TLS 1.0 was superseded TLS 1.1 7 years ago and that was
> superseded by TLS 1.2 5 years ago.
The
On Fri, 28 Jun 2013 23:27:19 +1000 oneofthem
wrote:
> That hasn't been updated for 6 years, hardly an option for a modern
> design.
Your argument is completely invalid, and not just because the
information is wrong. A good design remains a good design regardless of
age. Has SSL changed so much si
On Tue, 25 Jun 2013 16:00:27 -0400 Jacob Todd
wrote:
> Have you not heard of tabbed?
Perhaps you should read his mail.
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On Tue, 25 Jun 2013 21:57:44 +0200 (CEST) philippe.g...@free.fr wrote:
> If people are interested I can send the patch. Let me know if I
> should post it directly to this mailing list.
You should post it to the wiki. That is the standard procedure for
sharing patches.
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On Tue, 11 Jun 2013 11:11:03 -0400 Jacob Todd
wrote:
> No, not having a website would suck less.
Not having a website would suck more...
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On Tue, 11 Jun 2013 15:09:10 +0200 hiro <23h...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Only create software that you would want to use yourself, everything
> else is a waste of time.
This is bad advice, perhaps just because, like most snappy mantras,
it's a gross oversimplification of reality. Some non-developers ne
On Mon, 10 Jun 2013 18:12:57 +0100 Michael Stevens
wrote:
> Are there any mail clients that don't suck?
Mutt for CLI, Claws Mail for GUI. I don't think either of them suck.
es
based on frequency of use, but it had a bug, and it doesn't actually matter, so
I got back to work. With tab-completion, I rarely need the plumber for anything
but web links, as typing an image viewer command is much faster than fetching
the mouse to highlight text.
--Andrew Hills
On Sat, Feb 09, 2013 at 12:20:58PM +0100, Hugues Moretto-Viry wrote:
> Anyway, I need to store my passwords so I chose SQlite, because I don't
> want to put them in a regular file or in the script.
> Unfortunately, I think this is not really perfect.
>
> Do you know how to store my passwords outsi
> Sorry, I wrote it from gmail, not from within MUA since I cannot do that
> momentarily. Does it create any problems for others?
When you write from GMail, please click the "« Plain Text" button
under the formatting bar.
--Andrew Hills
outside the page's domain? This would cause most Google API
Web 2.0 HTML5 nonsense to fail, but ordinary pages with advertisements
hosted elsewhere (most of them, in my experience) would become
ordinary pages without advertisements.
--Andrew Hills
dwm has currently.
I can't wait for the libdraw addition, so that I can keep dwm at tip
without using Xft, which causes me endless headaches. I also look
forward to its use in st...
--Andrew Hills
On Wed, Nov 7, 2012 at 7:04 AM, Joerg Zinke wrote:
> toki pona to the rescue!
http://en.tokipona.org/wiki/Dark_teenage_poetry
I'm sold.
--Andrew Hills
On Fri, Nov 2, 2012 at 3:12 PM, Christoph Lohmann <2...@r-36.net> wrote:
> * nyancat(1) works.
This is the feature I was waiting for; thanks.
--Andrew Hills
On Sun, Oct 28, 2012 at 9:36 AM, Kurt H Maier wrote:
> It might as well *be* HTML email.
I assume that the typesetting will be done on his end, instead of just
dumping verbose formatting into your terminal. I don't think that
makes for a fair comparison.
--Andrew Hills
The call to XkbKeycodeToKeysym always returns zero for me when I run
dwm through RealVNC, probably because it sucks. Attached is the patch
against tip (reverting 737cf52cd031) for others forced to run dwm on
shitty systems.
--Andrew Hills
dwm-keycode-to-keysym-vnc-fix.patch
Description: Binary
Really?
--Andrew Hills
On Thu, Oct 4, 2012 at 9:15 AM, Edgaras wrote:
> I just did "hg pull;rm config.h;make;./st" so it should be tip st with default
> config.
Don't forget "hg up".
--Andrew Hills
ally care if they perform different functions.
--Andrew Hills
is correct.
--Andrew Hills
st-tip-xcopy-cleanup.diff
Description: Binary data
mount of feedback you get is usually proportional to
the amount of interest in the feature.
--Andrew Hills
On Sun, Aug 12, 2012 at 8:23 PM, Uriel wrote:
> This whole topic is so silly, just use a language that doesn't need
> any of this nonsense, like Go.
Are you insinuating that Go is the best choice for all projects,
regardless of requirements? Or just that C is never the right choice
that you can't do in
awk? For that matter, since Perl can do just about everything, if not
as quickly or easily, why not support just Perl, and no other tools?
--Andrew Hills
is not correlated with the same ability in other X
software, but for some reason xterm is a good indicator.
--Andrew Hills
On Sun, Jul 15, 2012 at 8:43 PM, Kurt H Maier wrote:
> none of which indicates mk is any more similar to make than redo
To actually answer your question, mk-files resemble Makefiles more
than whatever redo is using.
--Andrew Hills
find that when a project has more
managers than engineers, it produces so many productivity charts that
the productivity of the project as a whole is essentially infinite.
--Andrew Hills
n a
> terminal, it works.
Usually the output for your window manager (which is where errors will
end up) ends up in Xorg.log, or ~/.vnc/[host:port].log if you're
running a VNC server. If your window manager is running on a different
machine than your X server, though... I have no idea.
--Andrew Hills
> You must be very proud of yourself?
Yes, it is very difficult to use a computer without bloat. It is like a
chair without a cushion.
--Andrew Hills
27;t caught on yet, run ps or top and
look at the process. Make sense now?
--Andrew Hills
#include
int main(int argc, char** argv)
{
int i;
for(i = 0; i < argc; i++)
printf("argv[%d]=\"%s\"\n", i, argv[i]);
for(;;);
return 0;
}
here's a patch
that masks it in argv. (I tried to match the coding style as close as
possible.)
--Andrew Hills
ii-mask-key-argv.patch
Description: Binary data
ranteed by C89, although that doesn't really mean
anything in practice... but it works on Linux.
--Andrew Hills
On Sat, May 5, 2012 at 3:22 PM, Ethan Grammatikidis wrote:
> Maybe I should just run Debian.
Or maybe you just shouldn't use libvterm...
Here's a mirror of whatever bzr checks out by default:
http://ednos.net/libvterm.tar.bz2
--Andrew Hills
?
--Andrew Hills
On Sat, May 5, 2012 at 2:04 PM, Ethan Grammatikidis wrote:
> On Mon, 19 Mar 2012 15:25:49 -0400
> Philip Kovac wrote:
>
>> Regarding one of the goals of 'st,' would the suckless crowd be
>> interested in resolving the current admitted shortcomings of
On Sun, Apr 15, 2012 at 5:02 PM, Joerg Zinke wrote:
> I think you are wrong. An example for a TUI with images is w3m compiled with
> inline images.
I think, by definition, a TUI cannot display images. It becomes a GUI.
--Andrew Hills
On Fri, Apr 13, 2012 at 10:07 AM, Stephen Paul Weber
wrote:
> Somebody claiming to be Andrew Hills wrote:
>> You couldn't pay me to use the GTK+ GUI. I use the pure X11 GUI. So
>> does everyone else here at work.
>
>
> People use vim from a GUI?
> /me confused
u couldn't pay me to use the GTK+ GUI. I use the pure X11 GUI. So
does everyone else here at work.
--Andrew Hills
As an exercise, have the students parse this:
http://www.ioccc.org/2006/toledo2/toledo2.c
--Andrew Hills
On Wed, Feb 29, 2012 at 8:19 PM, Kurt H Maier wrote:
> Sure. Also avoid mentioning int, char, float, preprocessing, compiling,
> and functions.
Don't forget to avoid those dangerous operators.
--Andrew Hills
Thanks. It looks like the SHELL macro is still in config.h and still
doesn't do anything. Should it replace "sh" on line 712 of st.c?
--Andrew Hills
On Thu, Feb 16, 2012 at 12:51 PM, Aurélien Aptel
wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 16, 2012 at 4:11 PM, Andrew Hills wrote:
>&g
Will this be released/available at http://dl.suckless.org/st/? I don't
have Mercurial access at work.
--Andrew Hills
s environments is probably so low that it is not worth the
effort of suckless developers to update yet another section of the
website whenever something changes.
--Andrew Hills
27;t let me point to an arbitrary
directory of man page files or an arbitrary man page file. This is an
edge case, but I am suggesting that it could be helpful to those of us
desperately trying to survive in a world of broken Unix machines
maintained by an MCITP-certified IT department.
--Andrew Hills
binary. I guess I could write a program to set $SHELL and launch dwm,
but changing st is faster, and the only place it matters.
--Andrew Hills
from config.def.h if it's not used; attached is a patch for st-0.2
that doesn't use getenv(), which works for me because I don't have a
choice of setting $SHELL when dwm is launched. I'm sure someone will
have a better idea for handling this, or I could have changed the
termcmd in
MS Office? I don't know what Citrix is, but here's a
blog post from their website that says you shouldn't use it with MS
Office:
http://blogs.citrix.com/2011/06/16/layers-of-cake-ms-office-in-the-base/
--Andrew Hills
imes it just can't be used."
--Andrew Hills
scramble to create a
new class of masters.
--Andrew Hills
s that you can't teach functional
programming to stupid/most people, but you can make .NET easy enough
that they can design barely-functioning Web 3.0 pages without much
mental effort or understanding. Maybe I'm just a little bitter about
the number of morons who water down the value of my degree, though.
--Andrew Hills
On Mon, Nov 14, 2011 at 6:34 AM, Jacob Todd wrote:
> What's a landley?
An angry man, judging by the blog. Some of the entries have
interesting history (to someone new to computers, like me).
--Andrew Hills
Nothing you do to a web standard will ever keep a designer from using an
image to display text content except disallowing the transfer of images.
--Andrew Hills
I think you misunderstand. While he may wish that no user again uses wmii,
that is not what he has stated here. His stated wish is wmii's removal from
suckless.org because it does not meet suckless standards.
--Andrew Hills
n this list.
--Andrew Hills
indows, even
> google docs was better for the job.
OpenOffice = The Linux Desktop?
--Andrew Hills
tty1.
> I do so on daily bases, and thus code differently.
Do you use all (six?) of your ttys?
--Andrew Hills
, and reading this list for an hour
will tell you the general opinion on inefficiency of any kind.
--Andrew Hills
e with access to his
computer.
--Andrew Hills
anyone else seen this behavior?
--Andrew Hills
On Wed, Oct 19, 2011 at 8:30 AM, Nick wrote:
> It isn't. I use terminus 16 on my computers, one with an
> Intel gfx card, one with an nVidia one, and they are both
> quite fast.
The computers are fast, or st has no performance issues (and is thus fast)?
--Andrew Hills
to avoid straining my eyes--Terminus
12 or 14. This may be related.
--Andrew Hills
both st and X). This
is with st tip and 0.1.1.
Using st as an xterm replacement for some time, I found that the
missing scrollback buffer is unimportant to me, so long as I have
less, and the only real workaround I use is telling vim that it's
running in an xterm.
--Andrew Hills
On Mon, Oct 3, 2011 at 3:18 PM, Kurt H Maier wrote:
> mouthbreathing farmers.
I can't tell whether or not this is an insult.
--Andrew Hills
On Tue, Sep 20, 2011 at 2:01 PM, Kurt H Maier wrote:
> The whole thing is written in XML.
Because their C++ didn't suck enough.
--Andrew Hills
MOD-J until you're back at the first window. If you need the list all
at once, maybe write them down as you go? You could also attach a
debugger and browse through the client list.
--Andrew Hills
On Tue, Sep 20, 2011 at 3:53 AM, Yue Wu wrote:
> Hi list,
>
> Sometimes I wa
d to run it once per dwm launch.
--Andrew Hills
When I'm using Java software that fails in dwm, I run the wmname tool.
For details: http://tools.suckless.org/wmname
--Andrew Hills
On Sun, Aug 28, 2011 at 9:40 AM, Catalin David
wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> Thanks for the great work that you are doing with DWM. Been using it
>
I don't want to add an argument when I press Tab. On what system is
this the default operation, such that it is "obvious"?
--Andrew Hills
On Fri, Aug 26, 2011 at 1:23 PM, wrote:
> Hello,
> when tab is pressed, one wants obviously to add an argument
> and has to press
"twosuperior" isn't a key on US keyboards, and pressing Alt-2 injects
it in many applications. It is possible that it is confusing Alt-2
with your literal twosuperior. Just a thought--I'm not an expert.
--Andrew Hills
On Fri, Aug 26, 2011 at 1:29 PM, Mr. Bougs wrote:
>
tions so often that thirty seconds
rebuilding dwm will inconvenience you?
--Andrew Hills
nt is the "pertag" patch, which, if I'm not
completely wrong, allows you to choose your layout per tag. Then you
can have a tag for Thunderbird and a tag for Skype and set them to
different layouts. Does that work for you?
--Andrew Hills
g about dropping dwm's sloppy focus is it saves 20 lines of
> code! So how about we make dwm less mousy and a bit simpler, too?
Since the attached patch only removes code, couldn't a macro in
config.h trivially be used to select focus behavior without clutter?
--Andrew Hills
On Wed, Jun 22, 2011 at 9:32 AM, Arian Kuschki
wrote:
> How can I diff my local version against tip?
Check out tip:
hg clone http://hg.suckless.org/dwm
Then diff:
diff /path/to/your/dwm.c /path/to/tip/dwm.c
--Andrew Hills
On Tue, Jun 21, 2011 at 10:35 AM, hiro <23h...@googlemail.com> wrote:
> Also your rhetoric sucks, I feel no joy hearing these stories about
> nails and furniture.
Maybe I'm being insensitive to your culture, but are you sure coffins
are furniture?
--Andrew Hills
hey wouldn't need to run your C program each time?
--Andrew Hills
On Sun, Jun 19, 2011 at 7:57 AM, Bjartur Thorlacius
wrote:
> "WebApps" take all the power away from site
> administrators and give it to distributors.
Bingo.
--Andrew Hills
s use sshfs or scp.
--Andrew Hills
h would be nice to cover.
scp
--Andrew Hills
It doesn't sound any worse from a security perspective than any of
their other products, which they have no problem endorsing.
--Andrew Hills
On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 1:40 PM, Piotr Zalewa wrote:
> I use G2 as an emergency when I need to edit via SSH.
> it works well with vi.
I have a Motorola Droid on which I use vi over SSH on a regular basis.
It is extremely painless.
--Andrew Hills
On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 4:02 PM, Szabolcs Nagy wrote:
> * Andrew Hills [2011-06-15 11:51:17 -0400]:
>> On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 11:59 AM, Jon bradley wrote:
>> > I own a keyboard that has no pgup/pgdn, or arrow keys.
>>
>> Did you steal it from a museum?
>
>
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