Domingo, 30 de Março de 2014 2:09:03 UTC+1, Keno Fischer escreveu:
>
> ~/.julia_history2 unless Mike changed it. The format is different.
>

Hmm, strange I don't have it (Windows) but I do have a ~/.julia_history
 

>
>
> On Sat, Mar 29, 2014 at 9:06 PM, J Luis <[email protected] <javascript:>>wrote:
>
>> Where does it keeps the commands history? The old  .julia_history is not 
>> used (and lost) anymore but the commands "memory" is preserved, though 
>> reset to blank.
>>
>> Domingo, 30 de Março de 2014 0:57:13 UTC, Jake Bolewski escreveu:
>>
>>> This is really great work Keno and Mike.
>>>
>>> I think a great improvemnt would be to make completions were a bit more 
>>> modular.  That way custom completion callbacks could be added in at runtime 
>>> in your .juliarc file.  I'm trying to get zsh to do the shell completions 
>>> but that would only interest people who use zsh :-)
>>>
>>> Do we have an ETA on when 0.3 will be released?  This seemed like one of 
>>> the bigger blockers.
>>>
>>> Best,
>>> Jake
>>>
>>> On Saturday, March 29, 2014 3:59:19 PM UTC-4, Stefan Karpinski wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Good news, everyone! The pure-Julia read eval print loop (REPL) that 
>>>> Keno Fischer developed and Mike Nolta integrated into base Julia has just 
>>>> been merged. There are a number of nice things about changing from the old 
>>>> REPL to this new one, in no particular order:
>>>>
>>>>    - The old REPL used the GNU readline library, which we had hacked 
>>>>    far beyond what it was ever meant to do. This made modifying it a bit 
>>>>    terrifying and thus issues with it tended to get ignored or shelved as 
>>>>    "we'll be able to do that in the new REPL". 
>>>>    - The new REPL, is pretty clean, simple Julia code. Seriously – 
>>>> terminal 
>>>>    
>>>> support<https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/blob/master/base/Terminals.jl>, 
>>>>    line 
>>>> editing<https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/blob/master/base/LineEdit.jl>, 
>>>>    and the REPL 
>>>> itself<https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/blob/master/base/REPL.jl>are 
>>>> less than 2000 lines of code – 
>>>>    *total*. This works out to a net code reduction of 33233 lines of 
>>>>    code (GNU readline is 34640 lines of C), while *gaining*functionality. 
>>>> That has to be a project record. 
>>>>    - The new code is infinitely easier to modify, fix and improve, so 
>>>>    REPL-replated bugs will probably get fixed lickety split going forward.
>>>>    - The old GNU readline REPL was one of our GPL library dependencies 
>>>>    that make the total Julia "product" GPL. We'd like to shed these or 
>>>> make 
>>>>    them optional to allow for a non-GPL, MIT-licensed Julia distribution 
>>>> and 
>>>>    this is a major step toward that goal. 
>>>>    - The new REPL code already has fancy features that you wouldn't 
>>>>    even think about doing with readline. Try typing "?" or ";" at the 
>>>> prompt 
>>>>    and see the REPL mode change form "julia>" to "help>" or "shell>". 
>>>> Cool, 
>>>>    huh? 
>>>>    - The new REPL is noticeably snappier than the old one. Combined 
>>>>    with the static compilation of julia introduced in 0.3, going from zero 
>>>> to 
>>>>    REPL is pretty quick these days.
>>>>    - Since full-fledged line editing functionality is now built into 
>>>>    Base Julia, we can use it everywhere without worrying what libraries 
>>>> people 
>>>>    have installed. Once we settle on a good API, you can expect that user 
>>>> code 
>>>>    that needs to prompt for input will be just as slick as the REPL 
>>>> itself. 
>>>>
>>>> There will, of course, be some hitches and road bumps, but now that 
>>>> this is merged and everyone using Julia master will be testing it, they 
>>>> should get sorted out in short order. Much applause for Keno and Mike for 
>>>> this excellent work.
>>>>
>>>> Stefan
>>>>
>>>>
>

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