On Thu, Aug 17, 2000 at 05:26:18PM -0400, Sam Tregar wrote:
On Thu, 17 Aug 2000, Nick Ing-Simmons wrote:
Simon Cozens [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Wow. I'm sold. Can this be how we should be doing XS in Perl 6?
So we now run equivalent of xsubpp and cc every time script is run?
No. The
On Fri, Aug 18, 2000 at 07:20:28AM +0100, Graham Barr wrote:
So it is a security issue then as it needs somewhere to cache these
object files, and anyone must be able to do it.
No more insecure than having your own LIB directory, although the prospect of
every user having their own copy of
On Thu, Aug 17, 2000 at 07:01:59PM -0700, Brian Ingerson wrote:
Hi all,
This is Brian Ingerson (the Inline.pm author). My coworker, Colin Meyer,
tipped me off to this thread. I thought I'd throw in a few tidbits to
make sure everyone's on track. But first of all, make sure to RTFM.
Oops,
In my haste to upload version 0.23 (which supports MSWin32) I introduced
a bug which will cause "make test" to fail *only* if the user is
installing Inline.pm for the first time. Of course, everyone (except me)
caught this right away.
So I hastlily uploaded v0.24 :-) Please use that one
At 01:10 PM 8/17/00 +, Simon Cozens wrote:
In comp.lang.perl.announce, Brian Ingerson wrote:
Inline.pm allows a programmer to write C code directly inside a Perl
script and just run it. No XS, no SWIG, no make. Using Inline to write
extension modules for the CPAN is fully supported and