On Wed, Mar 5, 2008 at 12:55 AM, Philip Lowman wrote:
On Tue, Mar 4, 2008 at 12:39 PM, Sebastien BARRE wrote:
At 3/3/2008 03:34 PM, Matt Williams wrote:
I'm looking to see what you guys on this list think about me starting up
a 'cmake community' site, possibly featuring the following:
On Wednesday 05 March 2008, Miguel A. Figueroa-Villanueva wrote:
...
promote it for inclusion into CMake the author would need to open a
mantis feature request and submit it for review from the community or
maybe some official maintainers committee selected by the kitware
folks or whatever. I
A Dilluns 03 Març 2008, Matt Williams va escriure:
[]
I'm looking to see what you guys on this list think about me starting up
a 'cmake community' site, possibly featuring the following:
- News about releases
- News about projects' success stories etc.
- Simple beginner's tutorials
Just my 2 cents on this subject:
I don't think the CMake community is large enough to support a
second site, yet. I would rather see all those little snippets of
information, code, examples and tutorials on the CMake Wiki or in the
CMake documentation itself. I think if there is more
Mike Jackson wrote:
Also, what happens when you stop being a student with lots of time to
keep the site going?
That's easy. If he did a good job, he gets hired by Kitware :)
--
Gonzalo Garramuño
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
AMD4400 - ASUS48N-E
GeForce7300GT
Xubuntu Gutsy
On Tuesday 04 March 2008, Mike Jackson wrote:
Just my 2 cents on this subject:
I don't think the CMake community is large enough to support a
second site, yet. I would rather see all those little snippets of
information, code, examples and tutorials on the CMake Wiki or in the
CMake
I have a few find modules that I would be willing to contribute and I
hope other people may find helpful (see
http://crownandcutlass.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/crownandcutlass/trunk/Protocce/cmake/).
The ogg and vorbis ones may need some tweaking since those libs don't
have a default win32 path
On Tue, Mar 4, 2008 at 10:08 AM, Gonzalo Garramuño
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Mike Jackson wrote:
Also, what happens when you stop being a student with lots of time to
keep the site going?
That's easy. If he did a good job, he gets hired by Kitware :)
Does he? If it's Kitware's
Alexander Neundorf wrote:
I'd say not yet. For now it would probably be better to just help working on
the wiki, there you can also write tutorials etc.
A solution for additional cmake modules is needed.
There is also a cmake site at google
There is, but nobody is interested to help with
Matt Williams wrote:
- Discussion forums
Please, no. Mailing lists (ahem: I mean gmane.org NNTP feeds) are *so*
much easier to deal with. There's already gmane and nabble* if people
must have a web interface. (* I don't know if cmake is on nabble, but
it could be if deemed necessary.)
--
On Tue, Mar 4, 2008 at 12:39 PM, Sebastien BARRE
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 3/3/2008 03:34 PM, Matt Williams wrote:
I'm looking to see what you guys on this list think about me starting up
a 'cmake community' site, possibly featuring the following:
I think I agree with the other posters,
Hi everyone.
I've got a proposal for you all which I've been thinking about for a while.
Since cmake is now getting more and more widely spread, being used by people
for both small, casual projects as well as monolithic projects (e.g. KDE) it
seems like cmake itself, as well as the users of it
On Mon, Mar 3, 2008 at 3:34 PM, Matt Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So, what do you guys think? Is this sort of site wanted/needed?
Yes it is.
Is this list and wiki enough
No they aren't.
and should our efforts be focused on them?
The inevitable problem is labor. The mailing list
On Monday 03 March 2008, Matt Williams wrote:
Hi everyone.
I've got a proposal for you all which I've been thinking about for a while.
Since cmake is now getting more and more widely spread, being used by
people for both small, casual projects as well as monolithic projects (e.g.
KDE) it
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