# New Ticket Created by Matt Diephouse
# Please include the string: [perl #39719]
# in the subject line of all future correspondence about this issue.
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Commands like [array set] can't be inlined with templates because
there's no syntax
I'm a fairly-recent addition to the list. I've read a good part of the
archives, but not all. So forgive me if what I suggest has already been put
forward and dismissed.
First, not to resume the physical abuse of deceased equines, but just to
briefly address the whole "gaming of CPANTS" matter. W
# New Ticket Created by Matt Diephouse
# Please include the string: [perl #39718]
# in the subject line of all future correspondence about this issue.
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The following commands are implemented but have no tests:
after
binary
close
file
get
# New Ticket Created by Matt Diephouse
# Please include the string: [perl #39717]
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From the Tcl man page for [uplevel]:
"The uplevel command causes the invoking proced
On Jul 05, 2006, at 01:25 , Larry Wall wrote:
What made me laugh is that Pugs knows the exact value of infinity:
pugs> my $a = {"$^lang has $^c.as('%03d') quote types."}(:c
(Inf),:lang)
"Perl has
1797693134862315907729305190789024733617976978942306572734300811577326
75805500963132708
On Tuesday 04 July 2006 21:01, Audrey Tang wrote:
> Hence I'm puzzled why you raise the "dynamic language" categorization
> as a justification, for that term usually refers to dynamic typing,
> not to :immediate. If it is referring to :immediate, then Python/
> Ruby/PHP would become static langua
在 2006/7/4 下午 11:54 時,Audrey Tang 寫到:
Indeed, I'll welcome a writeup of why :immediate is useful and how
you envision it to be used; that'd be much better than "because
it's a dynamic-evaluation-during-compilation feature, and we are
working with dynamic-typing-during-runtime languages, so
在 2006/7/4 下午 11:36 時,Allison Randal 寫到:
Audrey Tang wrote:
But again, it's the architect's decision to make, and I will stop to
quibble. :-)
I'd rather help you understand why it's the right choice for a virtual
machine targeting dynamic languages, but if I can't, I can't. :)
Well, I'm c
Audrey Tang wrote:
>
> But again, it's the architect's decision to make, and I will stop to
> quibble. :-)
I'd rather help you understand why it's the right choice for a virtual
machine targeting dynamic languages, but if I can't, I can't. :)
Allison
# New Ticket Created by Matt Diephouse
# Please include the string: [perl #39712]
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From the [proc] man page:
"Each argument specifier is also a list with either one or
On 7/3/06, Ovid <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
- Original Message
From: Michael G Schwern <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Diagnostic information *is* unreliable in TAP.
> Do not parse it.
It is now being discarded.
Don't discard it, just pass it straight through.
Consider the use case of wanting
在 2006/7/4 下午 10:05 時,Allison Randal 寫到:
Perl tends to take the strategy of making the power accessible and
teaching people to use it wisely (a philosophy that Parrot carries
on).
I would note that only Perl 5, and Perl 5 alone, has this interleaved-
parsing-with-evaluation feature with f
Will Coleda via RT wrote:
This feature is needed for how parrot currently handles dynamic pmcs. If :immediate is
deprecated, part of that deprecation needs to include keeping languages which use dynamic
pmcs (perl6, tcl) functioning.
:immediate won't be deprecated. It's a dynamic feature app
Audrey Tang wrote:
> 在 2006/7/4 下午 8:50 時,Allison Randal via RT 寫到:
>
>> The :immediate feature isn't really a question of reentrancy (it doesn't
>> hold static data over successive calls, and it doesn't return a pointer
>> to static data).
>
> That depends on the :immediate code. The equivalenc
在 2006/7/4 下午 8:50 時,Allison Randal via RT 寫到:
The :immediate feature isn't really a question of reentrancy (it
doesn't
hold static data over successive calls, and it doesn't return a
pointer
to static data).
That depends on the :immediate code. The equivalence of
BEGIN { $Static::d
(Mail.app totally scrambled the previous mail; sorry about this re-
post.)
I'm glad to announce that Pugs 6.2.12 is now available from CPAN:
http://search.cpan.org/dist/Perl6-Pugs-6.2.12/
SIZE: 2693459
SHA1: c9731da8e597591ca7e279766481ce0bece8cfa4
This release features much better
On Tue Jul 04 12:21:06 2006, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Currently, if you use IMCC inside embedded parrot (eg. when compiling
> via PGE), when a syntax error occurs, imcc calls Parrot_exit (or
> downright exit() -- see imclexer.c)), and it terminates the
> interpreter right there without any
Hi Flavio:
You asked me on #perl6 to build a Data::Bind binary distribution for
Win32-ActivePerl.
After working on it for 2 hours, I (re)discovered that it's
impossible to do that, using the current generation of gratis
downloads of Visual Studio C++ Express 2005, as it seems that Perl
Author: audreyt
Date: Tue Jul 4 15:37:53 2006
New Revision: 9812
Modified:
doc/trunk/design/syn/S11.pod
Log:
* S11: To maintain implementation neutrality,
the p6-in-p5 incantation is no longer:
use v6-pugs;
it's now:
use v6-**;
Modified: doc/trunk/design/syn/S11.pod
=
(Audry, could you also cc perl.perl6.users on future announcements?
Thanks much.)
Despite the date, this actually showed up on
http://planetsix.perl.org/ today, in very truncated and mangled form.
The version I looked up in the nntp perl.perl6.announce archives was
also difficult to read (html
If, as seems likely, exception bookkeeping is moved to a separate
stack in the interpreter (with or without dynamic-wind actions), then
C/C addresses can stay in the Parrot_Context, and all of
pdd23_exceptions.pod that is quoted below ceases to be problematic.
Does that seem reasonable?
On Mon, Jul 03, 2006 at 02:27:30PM -0700, Chip Salzenberg wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 03, 2006 at 03:39:19PM -0500, Vishal Soni wrote:
> > src_regs and dest_regs are pointers to unsigned char. Unsinged char
> > being 1 byte will store 256 distinct values. Hence I declared the
> > MAX_REGISTER to 256.
>
I'm writing a parser for a language that treats a double newline as a
statement terminator. It works if I make every rule a 'regex' (to turn
off smart whitespace). But I want spaces and tabs to act as smart
whitespace, and newlines to act as literal whitespace. I've
overloaded to match only spaces
Hi all,
Because I'll be gone a couple of days, I wanted to get a quick alpha of the TAP
parser out there. It has no docs.
Here's how you use it (or you could look at the tests):
my $parser = TAP::Parser->new;
$parser->parse($tap); # croaks on bad TAP
print $parser->plan;
Author: allison
Date: Tue Jul 4 10:43:19 2006
New Revision: 13151
Modified:
trunk/docs/pdds/pdd23_exceptions.pod
Changes in other areas also in this revision:
Modified:
trunk/ (props changed)
Log:
[pdds]: Review and revise the Exceptions PDD.
Modified: trunk/docs/pdds/pdd23_exceptions
On Sun, Jul 02, 2006 at 09:26:20PM -0400, Bob Rogers wrote:
:However, I notice that S04 doesn't explicitly specify the dynamic
: environment for anything evaluated in a CATCH block.
Does now. Thanks!
Larry
On Tue, Jul 04, 2006 at 05:27:33PM +0100, Nicholas Clark wrote:
: I'm not convinced that sprintf needs an operator. It's not commonly used in
: any code I've looked at, which to me suggests that it's not good huffman
: coding to use up a terse symbol for it, denying that symbol to something
: else.
On Tue, Jul 04, 2006 at 05:06:54PM +1000, Brad Bowman wrote:
> Hello,
>
> It seems that sprintf is will still be around in Perl 6 [1],
> and that sprintf formats will be available using the .as() method.
> While looking at some Python docs [2] I noticed two things that might
> be worth stealing; a
On Tue, Jul 04, 2006 at 05:06:54PM +1000, Brad Bowman wrote:
: Hello,
:
: It seems that sprintf is will still be around in Perl 6 [1],
: and that sprintf formats will be available using the .as() method.
: While looking at some Python docs [2] I noticed two things that might
: be worth stealing; a
Hi all,
I'm going to be heading out town tonight and will be gone for the next two
days, but don't take my silence to mean that I've dropped this. I have started
on the TAP::Parser module and have the lexer *mostly* working. There are a
couple of extra tests I need to write for it and it will
Original Message
From: Jonathan Rockway <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> This leads me to another question -- what to do about output that the
> program prints to STDOUT or STDERR? There are some modules that I use
> that insist on C-ing whenever something weird happens... will
> these mess up my
>> Anything else
>> Any output line that is not a plan, a test line or a diagnostic is
>> incorrect. How a harness handles the incorrect line is undefined.
>> Test::Harness silently ignores incorrect lines, but will become more
>> stringent in the future.
This leads me to another question -- what
# New Ticket Created by Matt Diephouse
# Please include the string: [perl #39704]
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# http://rt.perl.org/rt3/Ticket/Display.html?id=39704 >
mini:~/Projects/parrot/languages/tcl mdiep$ grep -r XXX . | grep -
v .svn | wc -l
# New Ticket Created by Vishal Soni
# Please include the string: [perl #39706]
# in the subject line of all future correspondence about this issue.
# http://rt.perl.org/rt3/Ticket/Display.html?id=39706 >
The Register Number are declare of type unsigned char in IMCC
(compilers/imcc/pcc.c). Thi
Hello,
It seems that sprintf is will still be around in Perl 6 [1],
and that sprintf formats will be available using the .as() method.
While looking at some Python docs [2] I noticed two things that might
be worth stealing; a sprintf operator (%) and named parameters in
the format string:
a =
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