Page width is still an issue. Attached is the page source as acquired from firefox. Not sure if any of it is generated, so it might be useful?
On Sat, Aug 8, 2015 at 12:51 AM, William Blevins <[email protected]> wrote: > > > On Sat, Aug 8, 2015 at 12:24 AM, Bill Deegan <[email protected]> > wrote: > >> Can you try another browser on your system? >> Or do a full reload of the page? (Often shift - reload) >> > > Seems that the twitter feed missing was related to my add block. The > coloring for the twitter feed is messed up though. Might be related to my > custom colors, but the feed is dark gray with black font. > > >> >> On Fri, Aug 7, 2015 at 9:11 PM, William Blevins <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> >>> >>> >>> On Fri, Aug 7, 2015 at 11:39 PM, Bill Deegan <[email protected]> >>> wrote: >>> >>>> William, >>>> >>>> On Fri, Aug 7, 2015 at 7:34 PM, William Blevins <[email protected]> >>>> wrote: >>>> >>>>> Please see attached image. >>>>> >>>>> On Fri, Aug 7, 2015 at 10:08 PM, Bill Deegan < >>>>> [email protected]> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> On Fri, Aug 7, 2015 at 5:54 PM, William Blevins < >>>>>> [email protected]> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>>> It is a very big step in polishing your original design though. I >>>>>>> like it. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Thoughts and/or formatting issues: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> 1. I would put references under documentation so that we don't >>>>>>> have a menu item with only 1 entry. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Moved under community. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> 1. What happened to the feed on the right-hand side!! I miss it >>>>>>> already and we didn't even have it yet ;( >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>> It's there until you narrow the page beyond a certain point. >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I don't see the mercurial feed that was there previously... >>>>> >>>> >>>> It wasn't mercurial, it was SCons's twitter feed. >>>> >>> >>> >>> It was previously showing SCons bitbucket activity. If that was a >>> twitter feed, then kool :) >>> >>> >>>> >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>>> 1. The downloads page has lots of macros that weren't filled in >>>>>>> correctly. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Yes.. per my original email downloads page isn't right yet. >>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> 1. The layout seems to be 800x600 compliant? Can we support >>>>>>> wide screen? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> It's responsive design and will reflow the page to fit (pretty much) >>>>>> any size screen. >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I'm not sure its working right; the right/left side of my browser are >>>>> completely empty. >>>>> >>>> >>>> Do you have javascript turned off? >>>> >>>> >>> negative >>> >>> >>>> -Bill >>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>>> 1. Consider adding a link for SCons open hub on the right? >>>>>>> (nitpicking) >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Good idea. Any other similar sites we should link to? >>>>>> >>>>>> -Bill >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> _______________________________________________ >>>>>> Scons-dev mailing list >>>>>> [email protected] >>>>>> https://pairlist2.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/scons-dev >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> _______________________________________________ >>>>> Scons-dev mailing list >>>>> [email protected] >>>>> https://pairlist2.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/scons-dev >>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> Scons-dev mailing list >>>> [email protected] >>>> https://pairlist2.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/scons-dev >>>> >>>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Scons-dev mailing list >>> [email protected] >>> https://pairlist2.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/scons-dev >>> >>> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Scons-dev mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://pairlist2.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/scons-dev >> >> >Title: SCons: A software construction tool - SCons
SCons: A software construction tool
What is SCons?
SCons is an Open Source software construction tool—that is, a next-generation build tool. Think of SCons as an improved, cross-platform substitute for the classic Make utility with integrated functionality similar to autoconf/automake and compiler caches such as ccache. In short, SCons is an easier, more reliable and faster way to build software.
"SCons is a fantastic build system, written in Python (1.5.2) that does lots of nice things like automated dependencies, cross platform operation, configuration, and other great stuff. I would have to say that it is probably going to be the best thing for building C/C++ projects in the near future." — Zed A. Shaw, Bombyx project lead
What makes SCons better?
- Configuration files are Python scripts--use the power of a real programming language to solve build problems.
- Reliable, automatic dependency analysis built-in for C, C++ and Fortran--no more "make depend" or "make clean" to get all of the dependencies. Dependency analysis is easily extensible through user-defined dependency Scanners for other languages or file types.
- Built-in support for C, C++, D, Java, Fortran, Yacc, Lex, Qt and SWIG, and building TeX and LaTeX documents. Easily extensible through user-defined Builders for other languages or file types.
- Building from central repositories of source code and/or pre-built targets.
- Built-in support for fetching source files from SCCS, RCS, CVS, BitKeeper and Perforce.
- Built-in support for Microsoft Visual Studio .NET and past Visual Studio versions, including generation of .dsp, .dsw, .sln and .vcproj files.
- Reliable detection of build changes using MD5 signatures; optional, configurable support for traditional timestamps.
- Improved support for parallel builds--like make -j but keeps N jobs running simultaneously regardless of directory hierarchy.
- Integrated Autoconf-like support for finding #include files, libraries, functions and typedefs.
- Global view of all dependencies--no more multiple build passes or reordering targets to build everything.
- Ability to share built files in a cache to speed up multiple builds--like ccache but for any type of target file, not just C/C++ compilation.
- Designed from the ground up for cross-platform builds, and known to work on Linux, other POSIX systems (including AIX, BSD systems, HP/UX, IRIX and Solaris), Windows NT, Mac OS X, and OS/2.
"We are using [SCons] on Windows (MSVC and Intel compilers), Linux, IRIX and Mac OS X (gcc and two versions of CodeWarrior). Handles all of those with ease. It can do things like properly handle dependencies on auto-generated source and header files, which would be a nightmare in make." —SilentTristero (Slashdot user), 10 July 2003 post
Where did SCons come from?
SCons began life as the ScCons build tool design which won the Software Carpentry SC Build competition in August 2000. That design was in turn based on the Cons software construction utility. This project has been renamed SCons to reflect that it is no longer directly connected with Software Carpentry (well, that, and to make it slightly easier to type...).
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