Hi Simon, If you prefer to use the old `count_lines`, you can retrieve it like this:
git show 0cd989577a8b8d2666741fcac4fd3032ae212b80^:utils/count_lines/ count_lines.pl >/tmp/count_lines.pl It appears to need a list of files. The output is quite busy (not quite like your nice summary above). For example, the output of perl /tmp/count_lines.pl $(find compiler -name '*.hs') on `master` is https://gist.github.com/steshaw/b636fb76c805bfa0fff7484f5da11ed6 Perhaps if you recall how you used `count_lines` in the past, you can make an accurate comparison! Cheers, Steve On Wed, 15 Jun 2022 at 04:15, Ben Gamari <b...@smart-cactus.org> wrote: > Bryan Richter via ghc-devs <ghc-devs@haskell.org> writes: > > > A quick googling discovered > > https://githubnext.com/projects/repo-visualization, which has some of > > the desired features. :) > > > Another somewhat-related visualiation tool that can produce some pretty > pictures is gource [1]. I wouldn't call the output "useful" per se, but > it is mildly amusing to see the avatars frenetically flying about the > source tree. It gives you a sense of just how many people are > responsible for building the GHC that we know and love. > > Here [2] is a rendering of ghc's history. Best to skip the first minute > or so, which is largely just Will Partain setting things up. Things > really start to pick up around 2012 (around the 6 minute mark); it's > truly dizzying. Happily, this momentum has persisted to this day. > > Cheers, > > - Ben > > [1] https://gource.io/ > [2] http://home.smart-cactus.org/~ben/ghc/gource-2022-06-14.mkv > > > _______________________________________________ > ghc-devs mailing list > ghc-devs@haskell.org > http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/ghc-devs >
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