On Oct 17, 7:20 am, Steve Holden [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I still remember Gadfly fondly.
What a great piece of software Gadfly is ... congrats on that Aaron.
For me it was one of the first Python packages that truly stood out
and made me want to learn Python.
i.
--
On Oct 17, 7:20 am, Steve Holden [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
(see the graphic at the bottom of http://nucular.sourceforge.net)
It's a shame the name obscures rather than enlightens. Your stuff is
usually pretty good - I still remember Gadfly fondly.
Sorry you feel that
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Oct 8, 7:00 pm, Delaney, Timothy (Tim) [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
ANNOUNCE:
NUCULAR fielded text searchable indexing
Does NUCULAR stand for anything? The (apparent) misspelling of
nuclear has already turned me off wanting to find out more
On 9 Okt, 22:32, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well I'd like people to use the software because they think
it's good. If the name is a problem it's probably only the
first of many reasons they won't want to use it or will not
like it because it doesn't match their preconceptions.
Please ignore
[Paul]
tell us how the software compares to stuff like Lucene or Xapian.
+1
--
Richie
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Oct 10, 6:05 am, Paul Boddie [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 9 Okt, 22:32, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...tell us how the [ http://nucular.sourceforge.net ]
software compares to stuff like Lucene or Xapian...
I wish I could, honestly. I've looked briefly into trying
to put together some sort of
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
ANNOUNCE:
NUCULAR fielded text searchable indexing
Does NUCULAR stand for anything? The (apparent) misspelling of
nuclear has already turned me off wanting to find out more about it.
Tim Delaney
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Oct 8, 7:00 pm, Delaney, Timothy (Tim) [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
ANNOUNCE:
NUCULAR fielded text searchable indexing
Does NUCULAR stand for anything? The (apparent) misspelling of
nuclear has already turned me off wanting to find out more about it.
Tim Delaney
On Oct 9, 7:26 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
No, it doesn't stand for anything.
It also reminds me of someone we all know, and I wish it didn't.
As the latin proverb says Nomen est omen. Calling your package
docindexer would draw a lot more people. It is hard to justify to a
third party that a
On Oct 9, 8:46 am, Istvan Albert [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
ps. there is a python project named The Devil Framework, I cringe
every time I hear about it.Nucularis not as bad, but it is close.
Aw shucks. I thought it was funny. Can't I make fun of
politicians in my open source projects? Besides
On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 12:46:34 +, Istvan Albert wrote:
On Oct 9, 7:26 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
No, it doesn't stand for anything.
It also reminds me of someone we all know, and I wish it didn't.
As the latin proverb says Nomen est omen. Calling your package
docindexer would draw
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Oct 9, 8:46 am, Istvan Albert [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
ps. there is a python project named The Devil Framework, I cringe
every time I hear about it.Nucularis not as bad, but it is close.
Aw shucks. I thought it was funny. Can't I make fun of
politicians in my
On 2007-10-09, Robin Becker [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Oct 9, 8:46 am, Istvan Albert [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
ps. there is a python project named The Devil Framework, I cringe
every time I hear about it.Nucularis not as bad, but it is close.
Aw shucks. I thought
On Oct 9, 9:14 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
a great tradition of tounge-in-cheek package names, like
Cold fusion, for example.
Cold Fusion is a super cool name. Nobody will every think of it as
representing something odd or silly.
too late now. sorry again,
why would it be late? is the
On Oct 9, 3:35 pm, Istvan Albert [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
why would it be late? is the future of you own work not worth the time
it takes to rename it? Compared to all the other work it took ... it
is just a mere inconvenience.
From a sourceforge perspective I think it's more than in
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