Rick McGowan <[email protected]> wrote: |No. That wasn't CP/M... It was a different OS.
Oh yes, according to Wikipedia my remembrance was wrong. Sorry. "Doug Ewell" <[email protected]> wrote: |Steven Atreju wrote: | |> I'm learning in this thread. |> (And CP/M was that thing that Microsoft bought cheap to sell it |> expensively the very next day to IBM as their consumer box OS.?! | |This history isn't correct either, but I'm not going to bother going It was remembrance aquired by reading only, anyway. |The approach offered by common libraries isn't perfect, doesn't claim to |be, and doesn't need to be. It converts between LF and CRLF, and maybe |also handles bare CR (I don't remember). This is computationally |trivial. This is trivial. And refuted by reality. I was about to write about our internal approach, using a class Newline and a class NewlineFind which also has a classify(). Note that we have solutions to recognize the type of newline of a file, and note even more that the file will be written in exactly the same way, too, and as necessary. In this stormy context here this is absolutely remarkable. But you're terribly right, because compared to Unicode normalization and collation these processor cache heaters are really trivial tasks. The thing i hate the most is that zero-copy linewise reading seems to be history, because practically I/O libraries always have a(t least one) layer that has to be passed, for the text-encoding. Well. |> But this is good for the power industry and |> the hardware producers, is it. | |Please, no more conspiracy theories. And i would be pleased if you would not tear up sentences of mine and out of their context, shall i ever have to say something useful on this list again. |Doug Ewell | Thornton, Colorado, USA |http://www.ewellic.org | @DougEwell Thanks and Ciao, Steven

