search for: unixoids

Displaying 11 results from an estimated 11 matches for "unixoids".

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2005 May 10
6
Does R have a command for sending emails?
Is there a way to have an R program send an email? Something like this: address <- 'abc at d.com' text <- 'This is the email body' send.email(address, text) Thanks. FS
2011 Jun 01
0
[LLVMdev] Thinking about "whacky" backends
What benefit do you get from having a backend here rather than an interpreter for LLVM IR? Cameron On May 31, 2011, at 5:30 PM, Joachim Durchholz wrote: > I've been tossing around some ideas about high-level backends. > > Say, have LLVM emit Perl code. > > Sounds whacky but isn't. It's good for the first bootstrapping phase in > environments where you don't
2008 Oct 22
0
file and directory permissions?
Hello, we have a SLES 10SP2 setup with some collaboration shares distributed with Samba. In order to make sure files and folders on these shares are readable *and* writeable, the shares typically look like this: [public] path = /home/01_public create mask = 740 directory mask = 750 force create mode = 220 force directory mode = 770 force group = optiker read list = zhang, @optiker
2004 May 05
3
reading data
Hello, I??m trying to read data from a text file but i can??t When i print: > a<-read.table(file="C:/dados10.txt") The next error appears: Error in file(file, "r") : unable to open connection In addition: Warning message: cannot open file `C:/dados10.txt' Can you help me? Margarida PS:The operating sistem i??m using is Unix
2009 Jun 23
1
Indexing more than 15 billion documents
Hi, Sorry to follow up on an old thread, but I am wondering if there has been any work done on, or interest in, increasing the maximum document id beyond a 32bit limit? Daniel On Mon, Jun 18, 2007 at 04:11:54AM +0100, Olly Betts wrote: > > In particular, there is currently a limit of 4 billion documents in a > > database, due to using a 32 bit type for document IDs, but I don't
2008 May 11
8
[LLVMdev] Preferring to use GCC instead of LLVM
Chris Lattner wrote: > If you'd prefer to use GCC, go for it. No one is forcing > you to use LLVM. No, we would prefer to use LLVM, but a missing part in LLVM makes it difficult. It would be wonderful if this missing part could be supplied. > You are seriously ignorant of what LLVM is all about. > Please go inform yourself. Alright, I read some more on llvm.org and it
2011 Jun 01
4
[LLVMdev] Thinking about "whacky" backends
Am 01.06.2011 04:57, schrieb Cameron Zwarich: > What benefit do you get from having a backend here rather than an interpreter for LLVM IR? A backend that's self-sufficient and covers the entire Unixoid world. That cuts down on the number of binaries that one needs to provide for autoinstallers and such. Generated Perl could be used to bootstrap an LLVM IR interpreter, for example.
2011 Jun 01
5
[LLVMdev] Thinking about "whacky" backends
I've been tossing around some ideas about high-level backends. Say, have LLVM emit Perl code. Sounds whacky but isn't. It's good for the first bootstrapping phase in environments where you don't have a C compiler, where you don't have a cross-compiled binary for download, but you can execute Perl. It also makes a great inspect-the-sources-with-an-editor stage for aspiring
2019 Oct 16
6
Re: “Stripped-down” SSH (no encryption or authentication, just forwarding)
On 2019-10-15 20:00, asymptosis wrote: > On Tue, Oct 15, 2019 at 07:43:00PM -0400, Demi M. Obenour wrote: >> On 2019-10-15 19:11, Job Snijders wrote: >>> The S in SSH stands for secure. You are asking the wrong group of people. >>> You?ll have to resolve your issue in some other way. >>> >> This tool would only support running on stdin/stdout. Indeed,
2005 Aug 15
2
queer data set
I have a dataset that is basically structureless. Its dimension varies from row to row and sep(s) are a mixture of tab and semi colon (;) and example is HEADER1 HEADER2 HEADER3 HEADER3 A1 B1 C1 X11;X12;X13 A2 B2 C2 X21;X22;X23;X24;X25 A3 B3 C3 A4 B4 C4 X41;X42;X43 A5 B5 C5 X51 etc., say. Note that a blank
2007 Oct 24
182
Yager on ZFS
Not sure if it''s been posted yet, my email is currently down... http://weblog.infoworld.com/yager/archives/2007/10/suns_zfs_is_clo.html Interesting piece. This is the second post from Yager that shows solaris in a pretty good light. I particularly like his closing comment: "If you haven''t checked out ZFS yet, do, because it will eventually become ubiquitously implemented