C to Java Byte Code

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  • J. J. Farrell

    Re: Not STD C is "not C" ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code

    "Alfred Z. Newmane" <a.newmane.remo ve@eastcoastcz. com> wrote in message news:<2ul0kdF2a er25U1@uni-berlin.de>...[color=blue]
    > Thomas G. Marshall wrote:[color=green]
    > > Dik T. Winter coughed up:[color=darkred]
    > > > In article <Bltgd.6$304.0@ trndny06> "Thomas G. Marshall"
    > > > <tgm2tothe10thp ower@replacetex twithnumber.hot mail.com> writes: ...
    > > > > I don't see i=i++ as ever anything useful, but 45° tangental to
    > > > this > original thread is something that bothers me. There is a
    > > > *prevailing* > notion that:
    > > > > If it ain't standard C, it ain't C
    > > > > which I think is not quite true.[/color][/color]
    >
    > Mr Dik Winter, this is the result of white spae before the quote token.
    > This serves as an exellent example of what can happen, and why we are
    > asking you to fix this :-)[/color]

    Nonsense. It's the result of using a broken or misconfigured
    news reader.

    Comment

    • J. J. Farrell

      Re: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code

      "Alfred Z. Newmane" <a.newmane.remo ve@eastcoastcz. com> wrote in message news:<2ul8tsF2b uhqsU1@uni-berlin.de>...[color=blue]
      >
      > The text after "Dik T. Winter coughed up:" is in fact Thomas's quoting
      > of Dik, which got horribly miss wrapped, mainly because of the white
      > space before his quote char. Why should everyone change the way thing
      > have bene done the past decade anda half because one person decides to
      > diverge from that accepted norm?[/color]

      I'm puzzled. What has "the past decade and a half" got to do with
      anything? Dik's been quoting in this way in his posts to Usenet
      for well over 17 years. Why should he change because you choose
      to use a broken program to read his postings?

      Comment

      • Alfred Z. Newmane

        Re: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code

        Programmer Dude wrote:[color=blue]
        > Alfred Z. Newmane writes:
        >[color=green][color=darkred]
        >>> I can't imagine using a second piece of software to fix the first.
        >>> When I asked Forte about the lack of sub-folders they told me there
        >>> was a third party product that provided that functionality.[/color]
        >>
        >> Thats why I asked before if someone news of a good replacement that
        >> good do color coding, sort-by-thread-watching-AND-date.[/color]
        >
        > Agent--if the little things that annoy me don't annoy you so much--
        > isn't horrible (yes, I AM damning with faint praise, but you may
        > not object to its faults as much as I do). It does color code quotes
        > (one level--colored or not colored) and it does allow some tailoring
        > of what you see in a group (has watched posts, kept posts).....
        >
        > No, I take it back. Agent's crap.[/color]

        That's good to know.
        [color=blue]
        > Consider this: in the editor, it word wraps what I type just fine,
        > but completely ignores quoted material. Therefore, I have to
        > manually re-wrap quotes to fit my line length.
        >
        > Or, if you double-click a word and then attempt to drag-highlight
        > other words.... nothing happens. Only the double-clicked word
        > remains highlighted (what idiot thought of that?!?!).[/color]

        Ineed. Another classic example of a programmer's try-your-own-thing gone
        horribly wrong.
        [color=blue]
        > Or, it's sort of a quasi-MDI application (multiple windows in a big
        > window), but its behavior is annoyingly non-standard. The part I
        > hate most is that the "main" window is a three pane deal with your
        > list of groups, list of articles and current article. But I want
        > articles in their own window, thank you, AND I want to be able to
        > have multiple article windows open. But all this piece of crap
        > will give you is one article window. You can open a second "main"
        > window, but who needs that?[/color]

        I've seen very few applications successfully pull off this ort of MDI
        style appllication. If thye wantd to do it that way, they should have
        looked at Trillian (Pro) at how it lets you have *tabbed) containersfor
        message boxes galore, lets you have multiple containers, as well as
        "pulling" indicual message boxes "outside" the container, or do away
        with the container all together. One of the best semi-MDI designs of
        this sort of nature I've ever seen.
        [color=blue]
        > Or, the only reasonable way to use it (due the three-pane mistake)
        > is with the main window maxed. Which means getting at any other
        > window (your outbox, for e.g.) requires going to the Window menu
        > and opening it there.[/color]

        What the hell? Have the authors never used any other reader before, or
        did thye just miss the fact that Outbox is always a folder in the list
        (and I like when it turns bold (or some other style to indicate change)
        when there is something in it (ie: unsent messages), like any other
        folder.
        [color=blue]
        > And why is my outbox NOT listed with my Inbox and other folders?
        > Since you have to explicitly go open your outbox, it was weeks before
        > I noticed that I had a couple messages that never made it out (due
        > to Agent's "send" command being ^N (send Now)...I just can't get
        > used to that. ^N is almost universally New.[/color]

        Another classic example of auothrs completely ignoring how things
        normally work in editors. I really don't posibly know what their excuse
        could be here, given that ^N not only is a stanard shortcut for New on
        Win32 platforms, but also on Mac's (well, Command + N), and I've even
        seen this used in some GUI editors in Unix and Linux environments.
        [color=blue]
        > Or how about the fact that the folder list only provides a count of
        > UNREAD articles. Not the total in the folder (a far more useful
        > number to me, although I prefer both).
        >
        > It's also braindead in its handling of column widths.
        >
        > I mean, what kind of bad weed were these jokers smoking? They
        > might be decent programmers in some fashion, but they ain't much
        > in the user interface design area.
        >
        > No, don't buy Agent. You'd only come to regret it.[/color]

        After that review, I'll keep looking :-)
        [color=blue][color=green]
        >> I have to agree with you here too, if you know of a godo replacement,
        >> I'm all ears (and eyes :-)[/color]
        >
        > [sigh] I really liked Netscape 3. Simple and fast. Stayed the
        > heck out of my way, and I like that in a piece of software (also
        > in other drivers :-). I learned to love Netscape 4.7 and would
        > have stayed with it, but my company only supports IE, so I lost
        > the ability to get through our corporate firewall.[/color]

        NS3 (Gold) was my browser of choice once upon a time. Then came NS4
        (bleh, gag, snarl, spit) (Did ya ever try getting CSS to work properly
        in it after it was working with othes?) Well I suppose NS4.7 was
        alright, and used it for sometime.

        As for your corporate firewall, I doubt it would be checking wehat
        browser you are (were) using, it probably used soem automatic proxy
        settings; just snag them, and insert 'em into NS's prefs and you should
        be on your way :-)
        [color=blue]
        > I think the problem is often featureitus. The idea that an app
        > needs to have it all. The CuteFTP product *used*to*be* one of
        > the best FTP apps out there until they ruined it. Each new
        > "upgrade" made me like it less and less until--trying to jump
        > through the misbegotten registration hoops--I finally said, the
        > hell with it and dis-installed it permanently. (And they've
        > lost me as a customer forever.)[/color]

        I hear ya loud and clear. Thats why I never upgraded form BulletProof
        FTP (1.07, nice and clean). Later version of it also kidna went the way
        of CuteFTP.

        Another great example of bulkware if ICQ, after AOL took over it. They
        stuffed it like a 200 lbs turkey. (Anothe reason why I went towards
        Trillian.)
        [color=blue]
        > I've seen a number of really decent shareware apps go down that
        > road. Pity.[/color]

        Exactly. :(
        [color=blue][color=green]
        >> True, but some people had made the point that it isn't just
        >> OE that parses quotes in that way.[/color]
        >
        > Understood. But you're "talking" to someone who doesn't even
        > mind top-posting (even prefer it in some circumstances--I tend
        > to skip posts when all I see on the first screenful is quotes).[/color]

        Yes, sometiems needless bulk-quoting is a lot mroe of a problem. I find
        it extreamly annoying wen I'm surfing the google groups archieves on
        some search, only to have to click the show whole post link because some
        moron didn;t trim out the needly fat from their post. Come one people,
        you don't need to quote 8 paragraphs of irrelevant crap. *grumbles* lazy
        bums...
        [color=blue]
        > HOW a post is formatted is trivial and way below my radar. [shrug][/color]

        True. I've seen enough top-posting, trim-your-damn-post, and such
        rantings to last me a life time. IIRC, I started this mess by asking Dik
        if you could adjsut his quoting style, seing how many people's readers
        would mis wrap his quotes as normal text (as well as my color coder
        p ), just seemed like the right thing to do.
        [color=blue]
        > Now what was it... oh, yeah,... post ^Now[/color]

        I'll just ^Send :-)




        Comment

        • Thomas G. Marshall

          Re: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code

          J. J. Farrell coughed up:[color=blue]
          > "Alfred Z. Newmane" <a.newmane.remo ve@eastcoastcz. com> wrote in
          > message news:<2ul8tsF2b uhqsU1@uni-berlin.de>...[color=green]
          >>
          >> The text after "Dik T. Winter coughed up:" is in fact Thomas's
          >> quoting of Dik, which got horribly miss wrapped, mainly because of
          >> the white space before his quote char. Why should everyone change
          >> the way thing have bene done the past decade anda half because one
          >> person decides to diverge from that accepted norm?[/color]
          >
          > I'm puzzled. What has "the past decade and a half" got to do with
          > anything? Dik's been quoting in this way in his posts to Usenet
          > for well over 17 years. Why should he change because you choose
          > to use a broken program to read his postings?[/color]


          Is there a document somewhere which suggests how to form a standard usenet
          quoted reply line? I cannot find it via google.

          My understanding was that the line to be quoted has a quote character
          (usually >, sometimes | ) inserted at the /beginning/ of the line. Not just
          before the first non whitespace character.

          Is there someplace that defines (unofficially of course) the guideline for
          it?


          --
          Everythinginlif eisrealative.Ap ingpongballseem ssmalluntilsome oneramsitupyour n
          ose.


          Comment

          • J. J. Farrell

            Re: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code

            supermanisadork 71@yahoo.com (Al MacHonahey) wrote in message news:<f48b8b09. 0411021430.2f79 cb98@posting.go ogle.com>...[color=blue]
            >
            > In any case, Dik's usual (and arguebly broken) quoting IS a problem,
            > eventually wrapping get horrendous, forcing others to manually repair
            > it if any readablity is to be restored.
            >
            > Dik, once and for all, PLEASE fix you QUOTES. over 90% of readers and
            > parsers will NOT parse " > ..." as a line of quoted text. "> ..." is
            > _UNIVERSAL_, meaning any parser should not trouble with it, so why
            > break this universally accepted paradigm? Seems rather absurd and
            > selfish.[/color]

            "Selfish"? Don't be ridiculous. The people demanding that Dik should
            change the quoting method he has used for over 17 to suit some broken
            Johnny-come-lately newsreaders are the ones who are being selfish.

            It's perfectly simple. If you don't like the way Dik posts his messages,
            don't read them. If you want to read what Dik posts, tolerate his
            style, and perhaps get a less buggy newsreader.

            Comment

            • Dik T. Winter

              Re: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code

              In article <f48b8b09.04110 21450.52a15a06@ posting.google. com> supermanisadork 71@yahoo.com (Al MacHonahey) writes:[color=blue]
              > "Dik T. Winter" <Dik.Winter@cwi .nl> wrote in message news:<I6J5H3.60 s@cwi.nl>...[color=green]
              > > In article <2uo19rF2dhgalU 1@uni-berlin.de> "Alfred Z. Newmane" <a.newmane.remo ve@eastcoastcz. com> writes:
              > > ...[color=darkred]
              > > > Now this is /NOT/ what this is about. I have no problem with making
              > > > improvements any any existing thing, but making unnecissary changes to
              > > > something that has been vastly accepted for /good reason/, and not just
              > > > merely because it is an accepted norm. It's all for the sake for sane
              > > > news reading, not having to deal with malformed quoting and broken quote
              > > > casscades.[/color]
              > >
              > > Have you read what I wrote? I use this kind of quoting already about 17
              > > years. Once upon a time it was propagated for good reasons, and so I
              > > started with it in early 1987.[/color]
              >
              > And people even then asked you to fix it. The onyl thing that was
              > propagated from that was you to people's killfiles.[/color]

              Where do you get that idea? Before this thread I have had only three
              complaints in all of the newsgroups I write in, and all three the last
              two years only. As I wrote (just look upwards), at one time it was
              propagated for good reasons.
              [color=blue][color=green]
              > > So who is changing what? See:
              > > <http://groups.google.n l/groups?as_umsgi d=352%40zuring. mcvax.cwi.nl>
              > > and also see that Google has no problems with it; colour-coding is OK.[/color]
              >
              > For the most part, no, but it causes google to treat non quoted text
              > that happens to start with whitespace and a ">". Seems broken to me.
              >
              > Also, you were already killfiled by the time by some, after being
              > repeatedly asked to fix your damn quoting.[/color]

              Where do you get that idea from? Can you quote *any such request* from
              that time?
              --
              dik t. winter, cwi, kruislaan 413, 1098 sj amsterdam, nederland, +31205924131
              home: bovenover 215, 1025 jn amsterdam, nederland; http://www.cwi.nl/~dik/

              Comment

              • Thomas G. Marshall

                Re: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code

                J. J. Farrell coughed up:[color=blue]
                > supermanisadork 71@yahoo.com (Al MacHonahey) wrote in message
                > news:<f48b8b09. 0411021430.2f79 cb98@posting.go ogle.com>...[color=green]
                >>
                >> In any case, Dik's usual (and arguebly broken) quoting IS a problem,
                >> eventually wrapping get horrendous, forcing others to manually repair
                >> it if any readablity is to be restored.
                >>
                >> Dik, once and for all, PLEASE fix you QUOTES. over 90% of readers and
                >> parsers will NOT parse " > ..." as a line of quoted text. "> ..." is
                >> _UNIVERSAL_, meaning any parser should not trouble with it, so why
                >> break this universally accepted paradigm? Seems rather absurd and
                >> selfish.[/color]
                >
                > "Selfish"? Don't be ridiculous. The people demanding that Dik should
                > change the quoting method he has used for over 17 to suit some broken
                > Johnny-come-lately newsreaders are the ones who are being selfish.
                >
                > It's perfectly simple. If you don't like the way Dik posts his
                > messages,
                > don't read them. If you want to read what Dik posts, tolerate his
                > style, and perhaps get a less buggy newsreader.[/color]

                It's not very likely that the masses will outright abandon OE and OEQF
                combo.

                It's not the fault of OE by the way. OE QuoteFix made a policy decision
                that lines that began with non-indent characters (> |) are regular text.

                By the way, Dik's choice is /not/

                {space} >

                it results in

                {space} > {space}

                which adds to the width of the lines should he quote something that contains
                his own text in it somewhere, unless his nr is smart enough to remove the
                extra spaces.

                OEQF removes extra spaces for us as an options, properly turning
                [color=blue][color=green][color=darkred]
                > > > > >[/color][/color][/color]

                into
                [color=blue][color=green][color=darkred]
                >>>>>[/color][/color][/color]

                But I'm not sure that most do that.

                I'm still waiting on an answer from the creator of OEQF. We've chatted
                before via email, he should get to this concept soon. I'm betting he's
                already "ruled" on this---back when he wrote it the first time, but I just
                don't know.




                --
                Forgetthesong,I 'dratherhavethe frontallobotomy ...


                Comment

                • Programmer Dude

                  Re: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code

                  Thomas G. Marshall writes:
                  [color=blue]
                  > Is there someplace that defines (unofficially of course) the
                  > guideline for it?[/color]

                  Of course not. We're talking about *tradition*, not a standard.

                  That newsreaders have come to do something fancy with that
                  tradition means *nothing*. EVERY SINGLE newsreader I know
                  allows you to configure your quote style. That should tell
                  you something.

                  Comment

                  • Programmer Dude

                    Re: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code

                    Alfred Z. Newmane writes:

                    re Forte's Agent...
                    [color=blue][color=green]
                    >> Or, if you double-click a word and then attempt to drag-highlight
                    >> other words.... nothing happens. Only the double-clicked word
                    >> remains highlighted (what idiot thought of that?!?!).[/color]
                    >
                    > Ineed. Another classic example of a programmer's try-your-own-thing
                    > gone horribly wrong.[/color]

                    And I can't get used to it. To this day I find myself double-clicking
                    a word and trying to drag-highlight.... ARG!!
                    [color=blue][color=green]
                    > > Or, the only reasonable way to use it (due the three-pane mistake)
                    > > is with the main window maxed. Which means getting at any other
                    > > window (your outbox, for e.g.) requires going to the Window menu
                    > > and opening it there.[/color]
                    >
                    > What the hell? Have the authors never used any other reader before, or
                    > did thye just miss the fact that Outbox is always a folder in the list
                    > (and I like when it turns bold (or some other style to indicate change)
                    > when there is something in it (ie: unsent messages), like any other
                    > folder.[/color]

                    Same here. I get the impression they may not have well-developed
                    GUI skills. It's almost like they didn't know how to implement sub-
                    folders or something. It's hard to see how they could have missed
                    the *value* of such a thing.
                    [color=blue][color=green]
                    >> to Agent's "send" command being ^N (send Now)...I just can't get
                    >> used to that. ^N is almost universally New.[/color]
                    >
                    > Another classic example of auothrs completely ignoring how things
                    > normally work in editors. I really don't posibly know what their excuse
                    > could be here, given that ^N not only is a stanard shortcut for New on
                    > Win32 platforms, but also on Mac's (well, Command + N), and I've even
                    > seen this used in some GUI editors in Unix and Linux environments.[/color]

                    Yep. Their menus are a little goofy, too. I find things in what
                    seems to be the "wrong" place.
                    [color=blue][color=green]
                    >> No, don't buy Agent. You'd only come to regret it.[/color]
                    >
                    > After that review, I'll keep looking :-)[/color]

                    Then this has been time well spent! (-:
                    [color=blue][color=green]
                    >> [sigh] I really liked Netscape 3. Simple and fast. Stayed the
                    >> heck out of my way, and I like that in a piece of software (also
                    >> in other drivers :-). I learned to love Netscape 4.7 and would
                    >> have stayed with it, but my company only supports IE, so I lost
                    >> the ability to get through our corporate firewall.[/color]
                    >
                    > NS3 (Gold) was my browser of choice once upon a time. Then came NS4
                    > (bleh, gag, snarl, spit) (Did ya ever try getting CSS to work properly
                    > in it after it was working with othes?) Well I suppose NS4.7 was
                    > alright, and used it for sometime.[/color]

                    Concur (particularly wrt the CSS---yeesh!). By "learned to love"
                    I don't mean it was easy. More a matter of how you can get used
                    to just about anything.
                    [color=blue]
                    > As for your corporate firewall, I doubt it would be checking wehat
                    > browser you are (were) using, it probably used soem automatic proxy
                    > settings; just snag them, and insert 'em into NS's prefs and you should
                    > be on your way :-)[/color]

                    Right. Only it was never that simple. (At least I could never get
                    it to work.) There was some sort of active scripting going on in
                    picking the proxy server (we're a Fortune 50 company, so our systems
                    are on the large-ish side--multiple proxy servers).
                    [color=blue][color=green]
                    >> Each new "upgrade" made me like it less and less until--trying to jump
                    >> through the misbegotten registration hoops--I finally said, the
                    >> hell with it and dis-installed it permanently.[/color]
                    >
                    > I hear ya loud and clear. Thats why I never upgraded form BulletProof
                    > FTP (1.07, nice and clean). Later version of it also kidna went the way
                    > of CuteFTP.[/color]

                    Yep. I tried to stay with an early version of CuteFTP, but keeping it
                    registered (when upgrading PCs) was what finally did me in. I found
                    their help line rather cold and unresponsive, so I decided there were
                    other fish.

                    Compare that to a company I want to mention favorably: Axialis. I'd
                    been using their *outstanding* icon editor for years when the upgraded
                    the GUI beyond my taste for cruft. Also took away a feature (due to
                    customer request) that I relied on (the ability to build icon libs).

                    I complained to their help line and the response was outstanding! First
                    they explained the situation, *THANKED* me for my honest input (wrt the
                    GUI cruft)(and I don't mean that political "thankyouforyou rinput" thing,
                    but genuine, "hey guy, you got a good point"). In the end they ended
                    up *giving* me their corporate edition version which had the library
                    building feature I needed.

                    As a result, I'm a loyal fan forever, and I mention them whenever I
                    can. THAT'S customer service.

                    So, everyone, go check out http://www.axialis.com/ They make some some
                    good stuff (NO complaints from me about function!) and they are a very
                    customer conscious company.
                    [color=blue][color=green]
                    >> ............But you're "talking" to someone who doesn't even
                    >> mind top-posting (even prefer it in some circumstances--I tend
                    >> to skip posts when all I see on the first screenful is quotes).[/color]
                    >
                    > Yes, sometiems needless bulk-quoting is a lot mroe of a problem.[/color]

                    People just don't take the time to edit! (-:
                    [color=blue]
                    > I find it extreamly annoying wen I'm surfing the google groups archieves on
                    > some search, only to have to click the show whole post link because some
                    > moron didn;t trim out the needly fat from their post. Come one people,
                    > you don't need to quote 8 paragraphs of irrelevant crap. *grumbles* lazy
                    > bums...[/color]

                    Lazy Bums, indeed. And if I may diverge into a local political rant:
                    This provisional ballet thing....here we go again. All because some
                    people are too lame to properly get registered. ARG!!! Okay, I'm done.
                    [color=blue][color=green]
                    >> HOW a post is formatted is trivial and way below my radar. [shrug][/color]
                    >
                    > True. I've seen enough top-posting, trim-your-damn-post, and such
                    > rantings to last me a life time.[/color]

                    Same here. It saddens me that my fellow programmers can be so anal
                    and annoying about something so meaningless.

                    Oh, well, such is life, I guess.

                    Comment

                    • Alfred Z. Newmane

                      Re: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code

                      Programmer Dude wrote:[color=blue]
                      > Thomas G. Marshall writes:
                      >[color=green]
                      >> Is there someplace that defines (unofficially of course) the
                      >> guideline for it?[/color]
                      >
                      > Of course not. We're talking about *tradition*, not a standard.
                      >
                      > That newsreaders have come to do something fancy with that
                      > tradition means *nothing*. EVERY SINGLE newsreader I know
                      > allows you to configure your quote style. That should tell
                      > you something.[/color]

                      Well, most don't allow you to put white space before your quote token.
                      You are right it is a /tradition/, it has always bene tradition to start
                      a line with a quote character, lest it be counted as local text. furthur
                      more, most readers that allow for od and unusual quoting styles are
                      usually features created by people who probably haven't spent a lot of
                      time in UseNet. (Not always the case, but ther are some poor readers out
                      there.)


                      Comment

                      • Jerry Coffin

                        Re: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code

                        "Thomas G. Marshall" <tgm2tothe10thp ower@replacetex twithnumber.hot mail.com> wrote in message news:<P9%hd.338 1$rZ1.522@trndn y05>...

                        [ ... ]
                        [color=blue]
                        > Is there a document somewhere which suggests how to form a standard usenet
                        > quoted reply line? I cannot find it via google.[/color]

                        The only official guidelin on the general subject is RFC 1036, which
                        is ancient and provides no real guidance in this specific area.
                        Somewhat newer (but still roughly 10 years old) is Henry Spencer's
                        "Son of RFC 1036", which he published to Usenet as an "RFC Draft to
                        be" -- i.e. he didn't even consider it sufficiently finished to
                        qualify as a draft. OTOH, there isn't anything better either...

                        Taking the Son of RFC 1036 as our guidance, we find only that lines
                        should be broken "as appropriate", and "Although styles vary widely,
                        for plain text it is usual to use no left margin..." That's
                        _extremely_ weak guidance at best -- even reading it as strongly as
                        possible, I can't see how it could be taken as much more than a
                        suggestion that Dik's style is mildly unusual.

                        Then again, IMO one style guide to cover all of Usenet is nearly a
                        hopeless proposition. I'd _almost_ go so far as to say that for any
                        style accepted by one newsgroup, there is almost certain to be at
                        least one other newsgroup where that style would be rejected. Some
                        things are almost universally rejected, but there seem to be far fewer
                        that are universally accepted.

                        --
                        Later,
                        Jerry.

                        The universe is a figment of its own imagination.

                        Comment

                        • Dik T. Winter

                          Re: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code

                          In article <8msho0dlp7hsbs 9ohnta5m3qcc28d k7reo@4ax.com> Programmer Dude <Chris@Sonnack. com> writes:[color=blue]
                          > Thomas G. Marshall writes:
                          >[color=green]
                          > > Is there someplace that defines (unofficially of course) the
                          > > guideline for it?[/color]
                          >
                          > Of course not. We're talking about *tradition*, not a standard.
                          >
                          > That newsreaders have come to do something fancy with that
                          > tradition means *nothing*. EVERY SINGLE newsreader I know
                          > allows you to configure your quote style. That should tell
                          > you something.[/color]

                          One interesting thing I found was in one of the FAQs (but I disremember
                          which). It is stated that when you get the message 'more quoted text
                          than new text' with a rejection by the system you should first try to
                          reduce the amount of quoted text, en if you still was sure that all the
                          quoted text was needed, you should do:
                          :%s/^>/</
                          to change the quoting symbol. I am very sure that in earlier releases
                          it was advised that you should do:
                          :%s/^>/ >/
                          but I am not entirely sure. (That FAQ came into being long after I
                          started using news.)

                          [ Now try to find out from what time that advice dates ;-) I would think
                          from about the emergance of 'rn' as successor of 'readnews'.]

                          An interesting other tid-bit in (I think) the same FAQ is that
                          originally many people put a non-empty first line in their article
                          if the actual first line started with a space (and that happened
                          very much with that quoting style). The reason was that there were
                          news systems out there that would eat the first part of the article
                          if the first line started with a space...
                          --
                          dik t. winter, cwi, kruislaan 413, 1098 sj amsterdam, nederland, +31205924131
                          home: bovenover 215, 1025 jn amsterdam, nederland; http://www.cwi.nl/~dik/

                          Comment

                          • Richard Herring

                            [OT] Newsreader quoting conventions (was: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code)


                            In message <8msho0dlp7hsbs 9ohnta5m3qcc28d k7reo@4ax.com>, Programmer Dude
                            <Chris@Sonnack. com> writes[color=blue]
                            >Thomas G. Marshall writes:
                            >[color=green]
                            >> Is there someplace that defines (unofficially of course) the
                            >> guideline for it?[/color][/color]

                            That would be the Internet-Draft-that-never-made-it, commonly known as
                            "son of RFC1036", which says:

                            This SHOULD be done by prefacing each quoted line (even if it is empty)
                            with the character ">".[color=blue]
                            >
                            >Of course not. We're talking about *tradition*, not a standard.
                            >
                            >That newsreaders have come to do something fancy with that
                            >tradition means *nothing*. EVERY SINGLE newsreader I know
                            >allows you to configure your quote style.[/color]

                            This one doesn't.
                            [color=blue]
                            >That should tell
                            >you something.
                            >[/color]
                            Any chance you could take this discussion somewhere where it's on-topic?
                            I'd set followups, but it wouldn't be fair to any of the groups it's
                            being crossposted to at present.

                            --
                            Richard Herring

                            Comment

                            • Thomas G. Marshall

                              Re: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code

                              Dik T. Winter coughed up:[color=blue]
                              > In article <8msho0dlp7hsbs 9ohnta5m3qcc28d k7reo@4ax.com> Programmer
                              > Dude <Chris@Sonnack. com> writes: > Thomas G. Marshall writes:[color=green]
                              > >[color=darkred]
                              > > > Is there someplace that defines (unofficially of course) the
                              > > > guideline for it?[/color]
                              > >
                              > > Of course not. We're talking about *tradition*, not a standard.
                              > >
                              > > That newsreaders have come to do something fancy with that
                              > > tradition means *nothing*. EVERY SINGLE newsreader I know
                              > > allows you to configure your quote style. That should tell
                              > > you something.[/color]
                              >
                              > One interesting thing I found was in one of the FAQs (but I
                              > disremember
                              > which). It is stated that when you get the message 'more quoted text
                              > than new text' with a rejection by the system you should first try to
                              > reduce the amount of quoted text, en if you still was sure that all
                              > the
                              > quoted text was needed, you should do:
                              > :%s/^>/</
                              > to change the quoting symbol. I am very sure that in earlier releases
                              > it was advised that you should do:
                              > :%s/^>/ >/[/color]

                              I saw this as well yesterday----Not sure what it means.

                              [color=blue]
                              > but I am not entirely sure. (That FAQ came into being long after I
                              > started using news.)
                              >
                              > [ Now try to find out from what time that advice dates ;-) I would
                              > think
                              > from about the emergance of 'rn' as successor of 'readnews'.]
                              >
                              > An interesting other tid-bit in (I think) the same FAQ is that
                              > originally many people put a non-empty first line in their article
                              > if the actual first line started with a space (and that happened
                              > very much with that quoting style). The reason was that there were
                              > news systems out there that would eat the first part of the article
                              > if the first line started with a space...[/color]



                              --
                              It'salwaysbeenm ygoalinlifetocr eateasignaturet hatendedwiththe word"blarphoogy "
                              ..


                              Comment

                              • Thomas G. Marshall

                                Re: [OT] Newsreader quoting conventions (was: Not STD C is &quot;not C&quot; ? ----WAS: Re: C to Java Byte Code)

                                Richard Herring coughed up:[color=blue]
                                > In message <8msho0dlp7hsbs 9ohnta5m3qcc28d k7reo@4ax.com>, Programmer
                                > Dude <Chris@Sonnack. com> writes[color=green]
                                >> Thomas G. Marshall writes:
                                >>[color=darkred]
                                >>> Is there someplace that defines (unofficially of course) the
                                >>> guideline for it?[/color][/color]
                                >
                                > That would be the Internet-Draft-that-never-made-it, commonly known
                                > as "son of RFC1036", which says:
                                >
                                > This SHOULD be done by prefacing each quoted line (even if it is
                                > empty) with the character ">".[color=green]
                                >>
                                >> Of course not. We're talking about *tradition*, not a standard.
                                >>
                                >> That newsreaders have come to do something fancy with that
                                >> tradition means *nothing*. EVERY SINGLE newsreader I know
                                >> allows you to configure your quote style.[/color]
                                >
                                > This one doesn't.
                                >[color=green]
                                >> That should tell
                                >> you something.
                                >>[/color]
                                > Any chance you could take this discussion somewhere where it's
                                > on-topic? I'd set followups, but it wouldn't be fair to any of the
                                > groups it's being crossposted to at present.[/color]

                                Yes, that's forever a problem---you yank swaths of people out of
                                conversations by narrowing something that was already widely cross-posted.

                                --
                                It'salwaysbeenm ygoalinlifetocr eateasignaturet hatendedwiththe word"blarphoogy "
                                ..


                                Comment

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