James tampabay.rr.com> writes:
> > 1. Relax your stance and accept that some software out there that you
> > might want is 32 bits
> > 2. Refuse to have 32 bits, so give up on llvm and clang. Find something
> > else and move on.
> > You must pick one of those two. There is no magic hidden solut
Neil Bothwick digimed.co.uk> writes:
> > I still want to ensure I have no 32 bit packages on this system.
> Why? What is special about 32 bit libraries? They are dependencies like
> any other, if a package needs them why try to stop portage installing
> them?
Experimentation. I trying to only
Alan McKinnon gmail.com> writes:
> 1. Relax your stance and accept that some software out there that you
> might want is 32 bits
> 2. Refuse to have 32 bits, so give up on llvm and clang. Find something
> else and move on.
> You must pick one of those two. There is no magic hidden solution that
On Wednesday 10 Feb 2016 20:28:29 Alexander Kapshuk wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 10, 2016 at 7:02 PM, Mick wrote:
> > I've been struggling to parse/split/substitute some names and numbers
> > using a spreadsheet and think that this task may be easier to achieve
> > using conventional *nix tools. The probl
On Wed, 10 Feb 2016 21:52:16 + (UTC), James wrote:
> in my /etc/portage/package.use/000.abi I have this
> entry:: */* -abi_x86_32
When package.use (and other package.*) is a directory, the files in it
are concatenated, in lexical order. So your entry appears right at the
start. This means
On 10/02/2016 23:52, James wrote:
> Hello,
>
> My previous post suggest that every file under /etc/portage
>
> can be parsed for flags and directives. I removed all of the archives
>
> and that cleanup of /etc/portage/ is in progress. This question
>
> is unrelated, as best as I can tell.
>
>
Hello,
My previous post suggest that every file under /etc/portage
can be parsed for flags and directives. I removed all of the archives
and that cleanup of /etc/portage/ is in progress. This question
is unrelated, as best as I can tell.
Ok, so I just went to install something and got this :
Mick gmail.com> writes:
> some-description-with-words-012-63099.jpg
> The number and length of the words change for each file. The part number
> always has two components separated by a hyphen, but may also change
> in length and acquire more/fewer digits. I need two outputs:
> 1. the descr
On Wed, Feb 10, 2016 at 7:02 PM, Mick wrote:
> I've been struggling to parse/split/substitute some names and numbers using a
> spreadsheet and think that this task may be easier to achieve using
> conventional *nix tools. The problem is I wouldn't know where to start.
>
> I have a directory with l
Mick wrote:
> <<< SNIP >>>
>
> 2. the part number, but replacing the hyphen with "/", like so:
>
> 012/63099
>
>
>
I'm no expert on this sort of thing, and some other subscribers here
could verify this, but I have a question. Wouldn't using a "/" make it
think of it as a directory instead of a fi
Hi Mick!
Am Mittwoch, 10. Februar 2016, 17:02:46 CET schrieb Mick:
> I've been struggling to parse/split/substitute some names and numbers using
> a spreadsheet and think that this task may be easier to achieve using
> conventional *nix tools. The problem is I wouldn't know where to start.
I was
On Wednesday, February 10, 2016 05:02:46 PM Mick wrote:
> I've been struggling to parse/split/substitute some names and numbers using
> a spreadsheet and think that this task may be easier to achieve using
> conventional *nix tools. The problem is I wouldn't know where to start.
>
> I have a direc
I've been struggling to parse/split/substitute some names and numbers using a
spreadsheet and think that this task may be easier to achieve using
conventional *nix tools. The problem is I wouldn't know where to start.
I have a directory with loads of images. Each image file name has a
descript
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