Brandon Vargo writes:
> [1]: http://www.google.com/codesearch
> [2]: http://beagle-project.org/
Acckk, I forgot to thank you for the URLS you posted.. thanks
Brandon Vargo writes:
> do. When I go to find code that I have written, I do not remember
> variable names, lines of code, etc that I can match with a regular
> expression. Thus, that kind of search is pointless for me. I remember
> what the code does, the project for which I wrote the code, and
On Sun, 2010-06-06 at 15:37 -0500, Harry Putnam wrote:
> Brandon Vargo writes:
>
> > As an example of how it works, suppose I am making a news website and
> > have a bunch of news posts, each of which has an author, category, and
>
> Thank you brandon for such a nice through answer... Yeah, look
Brandon Vargo writes:
> As an example of how it works, suppose I am making a news website and
> have a bunch of news posts, each of which has an author, category, and
Thank you brandon for such a nice through answer... Yeah, looks like
I'm barking up the wrong tree.
I know about htdig.. Not muc
On Fri, 04 Jun 2010 17:52:05 -0500, Harry Putnam wrote:
> Googling lead to a tool called Sphinx that apparently is coupled with a
> data base tool like mysql. It is advertised as the kind of search tool
> I'm after and has a perl front-end also available in portage
> (dev-perl/Sphinx-Search).
>
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