Den 01-05-2016 kl. 01:54 skrev Brandon Allbery:
In fact, this is currently being discussed in IRC:
OK; seems there's a way out. Thanks for the info; I'll look into it the
next time I have a spare moment.
/kaare
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See IRC log for this day :
02:16 < grondilu> m: module A { multi infix:<§>($,$) is
On Sat, Apr 30, 2016 at 7:49 PM, Brandon Allbery
wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 30, 2016 at 3:05 PM, Kaare Rasmussen wrote:
>
>> sub poll(CArray[Pollfd], uint64, uint32) returns int32 is native { * }
>
>
> This, unfortunately, means an array of pointers to Pollfd structs, not an
> array of Pollfd structs.
On Sat, Apr 30, 2016 at 3:05 PM, Kaare Rasmussen wrote:
> sub poll(CArray[Pollfd], uint64, uint32) returns int32 is native { * }
This, unfortunately, means an array of pointers to Pollfd structs, not an
array of Pollfd structs. NativeCall doesn't support the latter currently,
as I understand it
Joe,
You don't need to specify the --prefix in the panda line just ensure
that panda and perl6 are both in the shell path and type
"panda install Bailador"
I tried this on the Mac with the most recent Rakudo Star and both
dependencies Digest and Digest::HMAC installed fine. You may need to
dele
Den 30-04-2016 kl. 19:14 skrev Kaare Rasmussen:
select(3) is an abysmal API. There's a reason most OSes replaced
select(2) with a backward compatibility select(3) and moved on to
something poll-like (look for poll(2) or epoll(2)).
Well, it's not that I fare better with poll. This segfaults
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Starting with rakudo commit fe2be65806 two tests in S16-io/supply.t start to
f
Den 30-04-2016 kl. 17:20 skrev Brandon Allbery:
I'm not sure; it's not documented :/ Also not sure offhand how
endianness plays in to select()'s bit vectors if you build them by
hand. Which leads to...
One shouldn't probably be surprised to see endianness involved in what
is described as a bi
> On 30 Apr 2016, at 17:00, Carl Mäsak (via RT)
> wrote:
>
> # New Ticket Created by "Carl Mäsak"
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>
>
> m: ''.substr
> On 29 Apr 2016, at 21:50, Brandon Allbery wrote:
>
> On Fri, Apr 29, 2016 at 3:47 PM, Brandon Allbery wrote:
> Oh, they are resumable exceptions? Useful but rather high cost I'd think.
> (Granting that perl6 isn't one of those languages that think exceptions
> should be normal control flow.
Fixed with d7698f3de2eb3c326aa , tests needed.
> On 30 Apr 2016, at 17:02, Carl Mäsak (via RT)
> wrote:
>
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On Sat, Apr 30, 2016 at 11:06 AM, Kaare Rasmussen wrote:
> Shouldn't this be a C style array with two bytes, 0 and 2, or
> 0010 ?
I'm not sure; it's not documented :/ Also not sure offhand how endianness
plays in to select()'s bit vectors if you build them by hand. Which leads
to...
Den 30-04-2016 kl. 15:57 skrev Brandon Allbery:
Note that "nfds" is the highest fd number to check for, plus one. For
the naïve implementation, you need to add one here.
Right, it wasn't in this example, but it doesn't matter much.
my $readfds = CArray[uint8].new(0, 2);
What is this i
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m: ''.substr(5).say
rakudo-moar 1acf80: OUTPUT«(HANDLED) Start argument to
substr out o
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m: ''.substr(5).handled.say
rakudo-moar 1acf80: OUTPUT«True»
that's one bug
* masak s
On Sat, Apr 30, 2016 at 4:35 AM, Kaare Rasmussen wrote:
> my $nfds = dup(0);
>
Note that "nfds" is the highest fd number to check for, plus one. For the
naïve implementation, you need to add one here.
my $readfds = CArray[uint8].new(0, 2);
>
What is this initialized to? The bit vectors are bot
More simplified code producing the same error;
$_ = 'some message';
my Hash $h = {
f1 => $_,
}
greetings
Marcel
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Hi,
Had some strange problem to solve... Could golf it down to the following;
*class A {**
**
NQP commit d54d719311 and Rakudo commit 1acf805b6 add a workaround for the lack
of actual signal handling on the JVM. Note this is for now limited to SIGINT
and SIGKILL, and cannot work for any signal that doesn't want the receiving
process to exit.
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Code:
say ‘a’ x 999
Result:
repeat count (-8446744073709551617) cannot
Den 30-04-2016 kl. 10:35 skrev Kaare Rasmussen:
Variations over [2] give inconclusive results, so I know I'm doing
something (probably very basic) wrong. But what?
The current incancation tries to dup the STDIN fd to 14, which should
be the second last bit in the 2nd uint8. But I've tried to
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Code:
say split ‘b’, ‘aba’, NaN
Result:
This type cannot unbox to a native integer
i
Hi
I've been playing on and off with the system call select (3)
(http://linux.die.net/man/3/select) in order to learn a bit Perl 6 and
NativeCall. But I get no traction, so I'd like to know what I'm doing wrong.
Before I start I'd like to wonder a little about the fd usage of moar.
Perl 5 ha
http://doc.perl6.org/routine/warn
"To simply print to $*ERR, please use note instead. warn should be
reserved for use in threatening situations when you don't quite want to
throw an exception."
And for testing, maybe something like this:
use Test;
my $warning;
{
warn 'some war
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