# New Ticket Created by Leopold Toetsch
# Please include the string: [perl #20358]
# in the subject line of all future correspondence about this issue.
# http://rt.perl.org/rt2/Ticket/Display.html?id=20358 >
disassemble sometimes takes huge amounts of mem and dies.
I'm using disassemble to ge
Leopold Toetsch wrote:
So I did it. Check in the first version of eval.
Test status:
make test succeeds, as well as -P, running the eval progs with JIT or
with -t (trace)/-b (bounds) option fails, probably related to messing
with the byte code.
Fixed.
bug in -j was triggered by garbage mem
On Mon, Jan 13, 2003 at 09:22:07AM -0800, Steve Fink wrote:
> On Jan-12, Nicholas Clark wrote:
> > IIRC Leo added an option to Configure.pl to turn on optimising.
> >
> > Prior to this, on IRC Dan said to me that we need to avoid the hack that perl5
> > found itself in, when it had to retro-fit th
At 7:29 PM + 1/16/03, Andy Dougherty (via RT) wrote:
The enclosed patch changes the logic to what I suspect was actually
intended.
Applied, thanks.
--
Dan
--"it's like this"---
Dan Sugalski
# New Ticket Created by Andy Dougherty
# Please include the string: [perl #20355]
# in the subject line of all future correspondence about this issue.
# http://rt.perl.org/rt2/Ticket/Display.html?id=20355 >
I don't think the ifdef logic is quite right in cpu_dep.c. Specifically,
if either __
The ability to download autodia off of the primary site and the mirror
is unfortunately broken.
-Tupshin
James Michael DuPont wrote:
--- Mitchell N Charity <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Doxygen unfortunately doesn't handle perl code, and even has problems
with parrot's C.
You might be
I still have most of yesterday's p6i mail to dig through (and
probably won't until this evening), but one thing that's struck me
(courtesy of an ill-timed grumble about objects) is that there are
really three ways to do inheritance, and most languages sort of do
them, with varying amounts of da
I have a Perl program that processes Perl source and generates fake C++
headers that doxygen will process. Doxygen doesn't have a hook for adding a
new parser, so this is the only way to hack it. The doxygen way of doing
things depends pretty heavily on special comments. My doxygen hack pulls a
So I did it. Check in the first version of eval.
First of all, I changed pdd06_pasm, the compile and compreg opcodes
didn't fit really well into - well - my scheme of objects.
A compiler is now a Parrot class, derived from NCI, living in
interpreter->Parrot_compreg_hash. This also needed a change
--- Mitchell N Charity <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Doxygen unfortunately doesn't handle perl code, and even has problems
> with parrot's C.
You might be interested in autodia, it handles perl.
http://droogs.org/autodia/
> (IMHO, the world needs a wrapper hack which allows
> you to run all thes
I was playing with doxygen (www.stack.nl/~dimitri/doxygen/index.html)
(think javadoc for C++) and thought I'd pass along some random pictures.
Doxygen unfortunately doesn't handle perl code, and even has problems
with parrot's C. (IMHO, the world needs a wrapper hack which allows
you to run all t
If memory serves me right, Jonathan Sillito wrote:
> x = a.f # get the method, a limited form of currying
> # since the first arg (a==self) is stored
> x() # output: A.f()
>
> setattr(A, "f", g) # replace A's f with g
>
> a.f()# output: g()
> x() # output (still): A.f()
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