On 7/11/07, William James <williamjamesgnusolaris at gmail.com> wrote: > On 7/9/07, Bryan Cantrill <bmc at eng.sun.com> wrote: > > On Mon, Jul 09, 2007 at 08:13:16PM +0200, William James wrote: > > > On 7/9/07, James Carlson <james.d.carlson at sun.com> wrote: > > > > Josh Hurst writes: > > > > > On 7/4/07, Peter Memishian <peter.memishian at sun.com> wrote: > > > > > > * 113-143: Please reformat to be 80-column friendly. > > > > > > > > > > Why? It may be appropriate for the 60' of the last century but today > > > > [...] > > > > > > > > Because the style guide says so: > > > > > > > > > > > > http://www.opensolaris.org/os/community/documentation/getting_started_docs/cstyle.ms.pdf > > > > > > That are Sun rules, not Opensolaris rules. It seems archaic today to > > > have a 50 year old punch card-style 80-column limit. Computers use > > > silicon chips, not vacuum tubes. Punch cards have been obsoleted, > > > operating systems use more than 640k, disks can hold more than 4GB. I > > > think the Slashdot article is right: A 80-column limit is history. > > > > I hasten to point out the irony that you decry the 80-column limit, and > > yet you carefully keep your screed to within that very same limit... > > So what? It's the default for GMail and I can't change it. That
I filed a report at Google to fix this bug Cheers, William -- @,,@ William James (\--/) williamjamesgnusolaris at gmail.com (.>__<.) GNU/Solaris hacker