Mail Archives: djgpp/1993/03/12/07:40:27
I meant to post this to DJGPP
------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
From: Self <PCMAIL/ECM9093>
To: turnbull AT ecolan DOT sbs DOT ohio-state DOT edu
Subject: Re: thanks
Reply-to: J DOT P DOT Fletcher AT aston DOT ac DOT uk
Date: 11 Mar 93 11:06:56
> Subject: Re: thanks
> To: LIP AT odie DOT ee DOT wits DOT ac DOT za
> Date: Wed, 10 Mar 93 11:49:27 EST
> From: Stephen Turnbull <turnbull AT ecolan DOT sbs DOT ohio-state DOT edu>
> Cc: djgpp AT sun DOT soe DOT clarkson DOT edu (DJ's GPP mailing list)
> >
> > Thanks again, the great support from you all is a real plus for djgpp
> > et al.
> ^^^^^^
> "Et al." is for people, not things.
I think it is the people that make DJGPP such a good thing. Look at
what has happened. All the debate has lead to a good port of GCC
2.3.3 whihc slots in very nicely (Thanks to all who contributed).
>
> > Regards,
> > Tony.
>
> Seriously, I think we're all aware that many sites are limited with
> respect to UseNet availability. But it's still the place to start.
> Show all the mail you got saying RU ("read UseNet") or RTFU (the
> obvious obscene gloss on RU) to your sysadmin. There's probably
> nothing he can do about it, but if you're doing real work with GNU
> which you are getting for free, you can afford about 300MB of disk for
> the cost of supplying one programmer with say Zortech C/C++ or Borland
> C/C++. For four programmers, you can get a 1GB monster disk at that
> rate. TANSTAAFL---if you want good support for GNU stuff, you gotta
> pay for the disk to stash UseNet!
> --
>
> Stephen Turnbull
I don't think usenet is the whole answer. There is something about
the GNU activity which is missing. I think it is a begginer's FAQ,
which would list the various GNU utilities and say
(a) WHAT THEY DO and
(b) HOW THEY DO IT
I am thinking of things like ar, ranlib (and rcs, which I just found
out about). There is a club of people who KNOW these things, from
the Unix world, and there doesn't seem to be such a guide. I knwo
that working with DJGPP has introduced me to a lot of these things.
For those who don't know:
ar and ranlib are the utilties needed for rebuilding a library.
rcs (REVISION CONTROL SYSTEM) helps to keep track of program (and
text) file versions automatically. There are TWO different DOS ports!
John
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Dr John P. Fletcher
Department of Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry,
Aston University, Tel: (44) 21 359 3611 ext 4625
Aston Triangle, Email(Most systems): J DOT P DOT FLETCHER AT ASTON DOT AC DOT UK
BIRMINGHAM B4 7ET U.K. Email(JANET only): J DOT P DOT FLETCHER AT UK DOT AC DOT ASTON
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