On 2020-02-26 18:41, Tom Browder wrote:
On Wed, Feb 26, 2020 at 19:47 ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
mailto:perl6-us...@perl.org>>
...
Hmm, this don't [sic] work either:
perl6 -e "my $proc=run( 'dir', 'test 1', :out ); my @RtnStr = $$proc.
out.slurp-rest.lines; for @RtnStr -> $Line
On Wed, Feb 26, 2020 at 19:47 ToddAndMargo via perl6-users <
perl6-us...@perl.org>
...
> Hmm, this don't [sic] work either:
>
> perl6 -e "my $proc=run( 'dir', 'test 1', :out ); my @RtnStr = $$proc.
> out.slurp-rest.lines; for @RtnStr -> $Line { say $Line;}"
Todd, sloppy copy/paste or error with
On 2020-02-26 15:37, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users wrote:
On 2020-02-26 15:11, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users wrote:
On 2020-02-26 15:06, Norman Gaywood wrote:
I don't have a windows system to test, but in all the examples shown
I did not see:
qqx{ C:/Windows/System32/fsutil.exe usn readdata "$F
On 2020-02-26 15:11, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users wrote:
On 2020-02-26 15:06, Norman Gaywood wrote:
I don't have a windows system to test, but in all the examples shown I
did not see:
qqx{ C:/Windows/System32/fsutil.exe usn readdata "$FileName" };
which is how I would have expected to write t
On 2020-02-26 15:06, Norman Gaywood wrote:
I don't have a windows system to test, but in all the examples shown I
did not see:
qqx{ C:/Windows/System32/fsutil.exe usn readdata "$FileName" };
which is how I would have expected to write the command.
That is the way I do it in Linux too.
$File
I don't have a windows system to test, but in all the examples shown I did
not see:
qqx{ C:/Windows/System32/fsutil.exe usn readdata "$FileName" };
which is how I would have expected to write the command.
On Thu, 27 Feb 2020 at 09:49, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users <
perl6-us...@perl.org> wrote:
> *From:* ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
> *Sent:* Tuesday, February 25, 2020 11:12 AM
> *To:* perl6-us...@perl.org
> *Subject:* Re: qqx with quotes
>>> On Mon, Feb 24, 2020 at 4:01 PM ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
>>> mailto:perl6-us...@perl.org>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi All,
>>>
>>> Windows 7
>
@Result = qqx { C:/Windows/System32/fsutil.exe usn readdata \"$FileName\"
}.lines;
Doesn't windows do something special for files with spaces in them? Hm,
$ type "hi mom" > "test 1"
$ dir test
$ dir "test 1"
but, you're right, I couldn't find a combination of dbl, single, q, qq, qqx, qx
that'
On 2020-02-26 12:14, Tobias Boege wrote:
On Wed, 26 Feb 2020, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users wrote:
$ p6 'say (99/70).base-repeating();'
(1.4 142857)
means that 142857 also repeats (it does not), but
that it is best it can figure out with the precision
it has?
What are you talking about? It do
On 2020-02-26 12:21, William Michels via perl6-users wrote:
This code below seems to accurately return the number of "repeating
digits" (576) using Perl6 alone:
mbook: homedir$ perl6 -e 'say
(6658570
This code below seems to accurately return the number of "repeating
digits" (576) using Perl6 alone:
mbook: homedir$ perl6 -e 'say
(665857000
On Wed, 26 Feb 2020, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users wrote:
> > > $ p6 'say (99/70).base-repeating();'
> > > (1.4 142857)
> > >
> > > means that 142857 also repeats (it does not), but
> > > that it is best it can figure out with the precision
> > > it has?
> > >
> >
> > What are you talking about?
On 2020-02-26 11:34, Peter Scott wrote:
On 2/26/2020 11:14 AM, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users wrote:
I used gnome calculator to 20 digits:
665857/470832
1.41421356237468991063
Sorry. Not seeing any repeating patterns.
Here is NAS doing it to 1 million digits (they have too
much time on
On 2/26/2020 11:14 AM, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users wrote:
I used gnome calculator to 20 digits:
665857/470832
1.41421356237468991063
Sorry. Not seeing any repeating patterns.
Here is NAS doing it to 1 million digits (they have too
much time on their hands):
https://apod.nasa.gov/html
On 2020-02-26 08:20, Tobias Boege wrote:
On Wed, 26 Feb 2020, Todd Chester via perl6-users wrote:
Hi Tobias,
I am confused as to as to what you mean by numerator and
denominator.
Rational numbers can always be written as the ratio of two integers:
a/b with b non-zero. One calls a the numerat
On Wed, 26 Feb 2020, Todd Chester via perl6-users wrote:
> Hi Tobias,
>
> I am confused as to as to what you mean by numerator and
> denominator.
>
Rational numbers can always be written as the ratio of two integers:
a/b with b non-zero. One calls a the numerator and b the denominator.
In Raku
On 2020-02-20 22:32, Tobias Boege wrote:
On Thu, 20 Feb 2020, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users wrote:
On Fri, 21 Feb 2020 at 13:31, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
mailto:perl6-us...@perl.org>> wrote:
$ perl6 -e 'say sqrt(2).base-repeating();'
No such method 'base-repeating' for invocant
On 2020-02-23 03:07, Shlomi Fish wrote:
Hi,
just for the record - I was not talking about Raku, just about a hypothetical
language with CAS-like capabilities (see
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_algebra_system ) that would be able to
do it. I was just using Raku-like syntax for famili
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