Dennis Putnam wrote:
> Although I don't think this is an OS X specific issue I can't find any
> place to seek help (there seems to be a GnuPG list but it is defunct or
> inactive). If someone knows of a better resource please let me know.
>
> I have installed GnuPG on a Tiger (10.4.7) server a
Michael Barto wrote:
> None of the ideas that were provide have worked for install the CPAN libary
> 'Net::SSH::Perl" because of failures wtih
> 'Math::GMP'. This is a summary of what I have done base on input from this
> list.
> Since there are other also complaining, what magic is happening wi
Ted Zeng wrote:
> Thanks. You make it very clear.
> I have assumed they should be the same.
>
>>
> I took a look at Net::SSH and it seems it is not what
> I want. It is much easier to install Net::SSH though.
>
> SSH has been a big headache to me. I wish OS X
> just has telnet. It is good enough
Ted Zeng wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Why the system behaves differently when I ssh to a machine
> from Terminal than when I ssh to the same machine by Perl's SSH module?
>
> Here is the problem:
> I added a tool to /usr/local/bin. I updated the profile file.
> Now if I ssh to the machine, I could use "which
Brian McKee wrote:
>
> On 7-Jun-05, at 1:57 PM, Wiggins d'Anconia wrote:
>
>>
>> Why wouldn't you? Memory, drives, video, etc. are all the same right
>> now. Motherboard has pretty standard features, other than it is setup
>> for a Power processor. A
Ian Ragsdale wrote:
> On Jun 7, 2005, at 11:51 AM, Joseph Alotta wrote:
>
>> I used to be a NeXt developer. This announcement is very reminiscent
>> of the NeXt announcement to stop making those little black boxes and
>> bring NeXt OS on Intel chips. We had just bought a ton of hardware
>> an
Ian Ragsdale wrote:
> On Jun 6, 2005, at 5:18 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
>
>> Jobs is insane.
>>
>
> I'm not so sure about that. IBM seems unwilling or unable to produce
> mobile G5s, which is a market that Apple considers very important.
> They also are 2 years behind schedule on 3.0Ghz G5s, and a
Mark Wheeler wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm having a problem with redirecting (Location: script.cgi) after a
> file has been downloaded.
>
> Here is the gist of the script. It creates two files (one html, the
> other text), then a download dialog box comes up so the first newly
> created file can be sav
Lola Lee wrote:
> Morbus Iff wrote:
>
>
>> /Library/WebServer/Documents/GoogleSearch.wdsl
>>
>
> When I ran this again, it died with this message:
>
> Illegal WSDL File Location - /Library/WebServer/Documents/GoogleSearch.wdsl
>
The test is trying to open the file just to test for existence,
Matt Doughty wrote:
On Wed, Mar 09, 2005 at 09:42:00AM -0800, Ted Zeng wrote:
Hi,
When I used perl on Windows, I used Mail:sender module to send emails,
with attachments.
Now I realized that Mac OS X doesn't have this installed (I installed
it on Windows myself)
and it has sendmail as a UNIX tool
Chris Devers wrote:
On Sat, 12 Mar 2005, Joel Rees wrote:
(One of these days I'm going to get version control running to my
liking, and I'll keep everything under /etc in version control. For
now, I just make a copy to work on and rename the old one *_nnn.bak or
something, keeping track of the
Ted Zeng wrote:
Hi,
When I used perl on Windows, I used Mail:sender module to send emails,
with attachments.
Now I realized that Mac OS X doesn't have this installed (I installed it
on Windows myself)
and it has sendmail as a UNIX tool, which can be an option.
My question is:
Do you use sendmail
Phil Dobbin wrote:
On 02/03/2005 @ 22:25 GMT, Wiggins d'Anconia, [EMAIL PROTECTED], wrote:
John Delacour wrote:
I'd love to hear a convincing explanation from someone why anyone
would
use such tools in preference to TextWrangler, BBEdit or Affrus. I can
imagine they'd make it a
Wiggins d'Anconia wrote:
John Delacour wrote:
At 9:45 pm + 2/3/05, Phil Dobbin wrote:
I'm thinking that if he's not comfortable with pico maybe emacs is
not the best idea...
I'd love to hear a convincing explanation from someone why anyone
would use such tools in prefer
John Delacour wrote:
At 9:45 pm + 2/3/05, Phil Dobbin wrote:
I'm thinking that if he's not comfortable with pico maybe emacs is not
the best idea...
I'd love to hear a convincing explanation from someone why anyone would
use such tools in preference to TextWrangler, BBEdit or Affrus. I can
Ted Zeng wrote:
Hi,
Thanks for the help here. I am almost finishing my first tool on OS X.
I am using TextEdit as the editor. I sometime use Pico, but I am still
not comfortable with Unix editor. I know there must be some good
editors for Perl. Do you have any recommendation?
ted zeng
Adobe Systems
Mike Lesser wrote:
Hi all. I'm having some difficulty dealing with packages like
PDF::API2; it's just too huge! This package has no man pages, just some
perldocs (perldoxen?), so I've been searching thru them over and over
andover.
I was thinking that with all the pm's that there are, ther
Joel Rees wrote:
While we're playing around with Editor Wars...
there's no need for that sort of language...
Boy,, there's nothing like a good old-fashioned editor war!
But this one doesn't seem to have much punch to it. More like a dust
devil than a cyclone.
Vim.
http://danconia.org
> I can't get Math::Pari (dependency for Net::SSH::Perl) fails to build
> on OS X 10.3.5. Suggestions?
>
> Thanks!
>
>
I had trouble getting it to build on Solaris 8. I was successful in
getting a downgraded version installed and it has worked (almost
flawlessly).
Math-Pari-2.010305 is the
mean it isn't the same thing. I doubt seriously you ask a
cardiologist about back pain??
http://danconia.org
> Joe.
>
>
> On Jun 1, 2004, at 12:02 PM, Wiggins d Anconia wrote:
> >>
> >> I heartily agree. People should be helpful. In the old days of the
>
> > ** This does not apply to you Sherm **
> >
> > I asked a question about quoting an argument prior to removing a
> > directory
> > to learn something about how the language handles things. I don't know
> > if
> > the rmdir method is recursive and/or forced in Perl.. Telling me to
> > try and
>
> On Apr 28, 2004, at 11:48 AM, Mark Wheeler wrote:
>
> > Hi Ken,
> >
> > I switched that because it was suggested that writing files over
> > system boundaries might be a problem. What is the difference between
> > the two? It sounds like, from your comment, that they do very
> > different
> Hi,
>
> Thanks all for the help on the mail question a few days back. That's
> fixed. Now I've run into another problem. I'm trying to copy a file on
> a local network (off a PC) to my Mac. But when the script is called
> from within cron, it seems that the script doesn't run. The cron looks
53 PM, Wiggins d'Anconia wrote:
Mark Wheeler wrote:
Hi,
I just installed 10.3 and am trying to get a cron job to fire off a
perl script which will send an email saying the cron job was completed.
crontab listing
* * * * * /Users/blah/Library/Scripts/test.pl
Here is the scrip
Mark Wheeler wrote:
Hi,
I just installed 10.3 and am trying to get a cron job to fire off a perl
script which will send an email saying the cron job was completed.
crontab listing
* * * * * /Users/blah/Library/Scripts/test.pl
Here is the script:
test.pl
--
> Hi all -
>
> I just put together an application using Archive::Zip that intercepts
> emails sent to an address on my MacOS X 10.2.8 system. It works just
> fine when the files are sent from another Mac using the built-in
> archive command. However, my client is using WinZip from his system
Bill Stephenson wrote:
Well,
I think that Kevin (morbus) really did a good job of pointing out why I
can't entirely do this yet. Some of the sites I host are critical to the
businesses that use them and Verio has always provided a great service.
Because they host on FreeBSD, developing on the M
> > "Chris" == Chris Nandor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> Chris> I was the one who started this mailing list. There is no admin
> Chris> of this specific list, last I checked.
>
> Chris> I fully support this posting to this list.
>
>
> Without such a stand, we enter a slippery slope. I
>
> On Saturday, January 24, 2004, at 12:18 am, Wiggins d Anconia wrote:
> > Readability? Why use a module for anything?
> It's not exactly rocket science to understand the escapes and
> seriously, using a print for each and every escape code format ?
> Expe
> Oddly enough I was just looking into ANSI escapes for the mud I was
> banging on about in another thread and came to the conclusion "Why use
> a module when you can just pepper your text with ANSI escape codes?" :
>
Readability? Why use a module for anything?
>
> Note the implmentation of
> On Thu, 22 Jan 2004, wren argetlahm wrote:
>
>
> Maybe Parse::RecDescent? Maybe I'm over-thinking this...
>
>
This is what I thought of immediately, an old but excellent article
maybe a good place to start:
http://search.cpan.org/src/DCONWAY/Parse-RecDescent-1.94/tutorial/tutorial.html
Wiggins d'Anconia wrote:
I can't remember
completely whether you can use it outside of the rest of the POE
environment or not
Nope can't, "Unlike Components, Wheels do not stand alone. Each wheel
must be created by a session, and each belongs to their parent session
Nathan Herring wrote:
I realized that I need to be more specific about my requirements.
My perl script calls arbitrary perl subs or scripts which do arbitrary
things. I hope good things. I'm not always sure. I am usually in control
of the subs but sometimes other people are.
I would like to re
Puneet Kishor wrote:
Some time in early 2000 Arlo Rose came up with an idea for a cool
little application. It would use XML to structure images, and a
scriptable language, like Perl, in such a way that someone who knew
the basics of Perl could put together cool little mini-appli
On Tue, 4 Feb 2003 00:14:30 -0900, "Dennis Stout" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Sheesh.
>
> Wil ya'll just help a man with a perl problem instead of battering him with
> other ways to do it?
>
At least one of these lists is a beginners list, the ot
On Mon, 03 Feb 2003 13:09:47 -0500, Jeremy Schwartz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Not trying to reinvent the wheel.
>
> I am using Analog for the analysis.
>
> I am trying to split the server combined log into individual vhost logs. I
> can then r
On Fri, 31 Jan 2003 11:10:00 +0100, Florian Helmberger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Donnerstag, Jänner 30, 2003, at 11:57 Uhr, Jeff Kolber wrote:
>
> I wouldn't attach a session to an IP address as it is quite common that
> a visitor's IP a
On Fri, 6 Dec 2002 00:03:43 -0700, "John-Michael Keyes" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Awright, I'm gonna float this one, even if it == $off_topic++;
>
> And I float to this group first, because I'm writing mostly
> ActiveState-deployed Perl on
Convenient that I just ran into this problem. It appears that the module will attempt
to download the source for PARI if it can't find it, but it appears that the module
can't find that source from the PARI site. As to why I have no idea, but if you go to
the ftp site manually (ftp://megrez.mat
What does: /Library/Logs/CrashReporter/Finder.crash.log say?
http://danconia.org
Lou Moran wrote:
I have posted several other places (one at a time) but this seems to be
a little hard for the average OS Xer...
You folks are better, in a Nutshell my Finder won't start which makes
using OS X
Why open the filehandle then test the filehandle? I believe you should just test the
file path with the -d then only open the handle afterwards.
http://danconia.org
On Tue, 26 Nov 2002 13:10:27 -0800, Matthew Galaher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
There is some discussion of this issue in the docs, check out:
perldoc perlport
And page through to a section called "Newlines"...
I guess the real question I have is does Perl on OS X qualify as MacPerl
or Unix perl ... I defer to the mac os x experts, but would guess Unix perl.
http://danconi
Ken Williams wrote:
On Monday, November 18, 2002, at 06:13 AM, Wiggins d'Anconia wrote:
Heather Madrone wrote:
Most of my career was spent as a C/C++ systems programmer.
The damage I can do with a command line as root is nothing
compared to the damage I can do with a C compiler.
Heather Madrone wrote:
At 10:38 AM 11/17/2002 -0500, Wiggins d'Anconia wrote:
Heather Madrone wrote:
At 03:29 PM 11/17/2002 -0500, William H. Magill wrote:
We're saying much of the same thing, however, this problem which you describe is not an OS or vendor level problem and not e
Heather Madrone wrote:
At 03:29 PM 11/17/2002 -0500, William H. Magill wrote:
We're saying much of the same thing, however, this problem which you
describe is not an OS or vendor level problem and not even an ACL problem.
It's a programmer/admin attitude problem, exemplified by the constant
I suppose that is better than one word. "RTFM" ;-)
http://danconia.org
Lou Moran wrote:
Please understand this is no flame... but I got two words for you:
Goo Gle
Look it up.
On Saturday, Nov 16, 2002, at 23:17 America/New_York, Joseph Kruskal wrote:
On 11/1/02 3:47 AM, William H. Magill a
deprecated is a general word for any programming language, OS, etc. that indicates
that a particular functionality is no longer suggested for new use but that it will
still work for indeterminate amount of time, and that at some point in the future it
will no longer work.
In the case of arrays,
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