On 14 Aug 2002 19:51:10 +0200, Dominik Vogt wrote: > > What's the point in this discussion? On the average system, the > shell and probably perl too are probably permanently in main > memory. It's moot to discuss the size of the executable in memory > since it's there anyway. What counts it the dynamic memory usage, > and that depends on what you do with perl/shell/whatever (and you > won't see it in "top"). memstat gives much better information > about dynamic memory usage.
The point is to show that perl can't be called huge any more than bash or rxvt or fvwm are called huge. Regards, Mikhael. -- Visit the official FVWM web page at <URL: http://www.fvwm.org/>. To unsubscribe from the list, send "unsubscribe fvwm" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] To report problems, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
