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Tim Bradshaw  
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 More options May 10 2012, 7:44 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Tim Bradshaw <t...@tfeb.org>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 12:44:17 +0100
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 7:44 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 2012-05-10 04:04:42 +0000, Kaz Kylheku said:

> Why, drag and drop. You have icons on the desktop for all possible characters,
> and then you just drag them one by one to the script icon.

You think that's a joke, but have you seen any of the maths editors
people use? A lot of them are just like that.

 
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Jumpin' Jehoshaphat  
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 More options May 10 2012, 8:47 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Jumpin' Jehoshaphat <jj1058672...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 08:47:44 -0400
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 8:47 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 10/05/2012 7:33 AM, Tim Bradshaw wrote:

> On 2012-05-10 09:24:26 +0000, Jumpin' Jehoshaphat said:

>> Classic paranoia. Where is Mozilla's alleged financial interest in
>> making people buy the latest and greatest CPU, mobo, and GPU?
>> Kickbacks from Intel, AMD, ATI, Asus, and nVidia? What's your evidence
>> in support of your outlandish conspiracy theory, Madhu?

> You know, there's some kind of horror movie script idea here, where it
> turns out that some terrible virus of the mind is spreading over the
> internet, the victims getting trapped in a loop where they repeat a
> small number of stylised phrases, eventually starving to death, to be
> found, wormy and decaying, over their keyboards. How will our hero stop
> the spread of the plague? Stealing a nuke and destroying the internet
> via EMP seems the only option.

What does that have to do with Lisp, Bradshaw?

> Oh: who do you think fund Mozilla? Where does their income come from?
> Gosh, what a susprise!

I very much doubt it's conditioned on intentionally bloating their
software, Bradshaw.

 
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Jumpin' Jehoshaphat  
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 More options May 10 2012, 8:53 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Jumpin' Jehoshaphat <jj1058672...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 08:53:08 -0400
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 8:53 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 10/05/2012 7:44 AM, Tim Bradshaw wrote:

> On 2012-05-10 04:04:42 +0000, Kaz Kylheku said:

>> Why, drag and drop. You have icons on the desktop for all possible
>> characters,
>> and then you just drag them one by one to the script icon.

> You think that's a joke, but have you seen any of the maths editors
> people use? A lot of them are just like that.

Probably because no standard store-bought keyboard has the alphabet, the
digits, the commonplace punctuation, the Greek alphabet, an integral
sign, dot-in-circle, aleph, square-root sign, del, grad, +/-,
squiggle-equals, not-equals, intersection, union, element-of, ...
symbols and a bunch of extra shift keys for overbar and the like.

So it's either toolbar buttons, an emacsesque bestiary of
impossible-to-memorize-them-all control-key combinations most of which
have no mnemonic connection with what they insert, or typing in verbose
markup like TeX code. (TeX editors sometimes give you the choice between
the toolbar buttons and manually typing in TeX markup. Useful if you
memorize the most commonly needed markup but can then just dig in the
toolbar drop-downs for less-often-used symbols instead of having to task
switch to a cheat-sheet, read some possibly-long string, switch back,
and type it, or copy and paste it.)


 
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Jumpin' Jehoshaphat  
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 More options May 10 2012, 8:53 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Jumpin' Jehoshaphat <jj1058672...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 08:53:39 -0400
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 8:53 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 10/05/2012 7:18 AM, Tim Bradshaw wrote:

> On 2012-05-10 00:58:31 +0000, Jumpin' Jehoshaphat said:

>> They usually do, if you want to avoid and/or recover from mistakes.

> Well, clearly they don't, sorry. Let's get away from the typing thing:
> how many notes a second can a good pianist play?

Data entry, of a sort, not command entry.

 
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Jumpin' Jehoshaphat  
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 More options May 10 2012, 9:09 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Jumpin' Jehoshaphat <jj1058672...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 09:09:26 -0400
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 9:09 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 10/05/2012 7:32 AM, Alex Mizrahi wrote:

>> As mentioned in another post, this can be useful for data entry on an
>> old, cruddy, lagged system or a laggy oldfashioned telnet connection.

> You didn't understand my point at all.

That is incorrect. I just didn't agree with it.

> The bottleneck is often in human sensory input.

Good FPS players prove you wrong.

> But it helps with those 'lagged systems' too. Maybe in your ideal world
> computers never go slow, but in reality it isn't the case. Even most
> modern systems can go thrashing if something goes awry, and in my
> experience it's better to use text console at that time.

In my experience it's better to fix whatever the problem is (e.g. nice a
process that started hogging the CPU, or restart it if it's not supposed
to occasionally do that, or even debug it and recompile it) than to just
try to carry on regardless.

> Also, if you just happen to need to work with server in California from
> Europe you have ~300 ms roundtrip for each packet just due to the speed
> of the light.

Input to your locally-running browser will not be affected by this.
Stuff typed into a web form will echo promptly and mouse movement won't
be affected. It may just take a while for the response to get back to
you after you click "submit" or a link or whatever.

> No matter how fast your network is and how fast your
> computer it. In command prompt it is noticeable, but not problematic at
> all. With GUI it might be more of an issue.

You're hypothesizing somehow puppetting a GUI that's running on *the
remote machine* rather than using a local client or web browser to
communicate with the server. That would be ... weird. Mostly you use a
web interface to a remote machine these days. If for some reason you
can't (usually because you're the admin trying to remote-fix the machine
after the httpd died) you grit your teeth, ssh into it, and use a
command prompt. So when there's a GUI its mouse/keyboard feedback loop
is local rather than stretching over the network.

>> For command entry it's just asking for trouble. Enter a directory and
>> select the third file to be deleted sight-unseen? Er, I don't think so.
>> What if the third file isn't what you assumed it would be? You could be
>> misremembering, or other users (if any) may have added or removed or
>> renamed files in there.

> You're strawmanning shit out of this.

Classic unsubstantiated and erroneous claims.

> Not all commands are deleting files.

That was an example.

> Shell commands reference file name, but not position.

The example was using a program more like dired rather than a command
prompt.

> I can type `cd .. <enter> ls` without checking that cd was correct. In
> the worst case I'd have to type it again. It isn't like cd will
> accidentally turn to `rm -rf` a.

Actually, if there's line noise you never know. ;)

> When I'm typing commands I'm very aware of what they do. So I need
> different levels of attention, and I can do cd/ls stuff much faster than
> rm -rf. And that's actually great because maybe 90% of commands are like
> cd/ls but not rm.

You could still find yourself wasting time, at the very least, if you
wind up taking a wrong turn somewhere while overdriving your headlights,
even if you manage not to crash.

> rm -rf frobla.txt <look that it's correct> <enter>

And if you're in the wrong directory and there are frobla.txts you don't
want to delete as well as ones you do, in different parts of the
filesystem ...

> In reality it's more like
> 1. rm -rf fro<TAB>
> 2. look whether it was completed, there is a list of options or ...
> 3. when everything looks OK press enter.

The GUI equivalent would be to click a file and hit del. You'd have to
look to see that it had acknowledged your click and selected the file
before hitting del, but that's the same as your having to look before
hitting enter.

Where you went off the rails is comparing keystrokes to mouse clicks.
Everything but the "rm" and "enter" parts correspond to one single mouse
click to select the file. The del key supplies those parts (and gives a
confirmation prompt in any decent GUI file manager to boot, as one added
level of safety).

If you're deleting all files of that name under some directory, if
you're using a recent Windoze you'd type frobla into the search box,
wait for it to find everything, then hit ctrl+A DEL. Again one wait.

> Please learn how to use shell before criticizing it.

Classic erroneous presupposition.

>>> No, you're just using straw man shamelessly here.

>> Don't be ridiculous. I'm just pointing out an inconsistency in the
>> pro-keyboard-only position.

> And who holds that pro-keyboard-only position?

You, Madhu, and Kylheku, at the very least.

>> As do I, for the most part; also for some actions that involve selecting
>> from large numbers of options (you can acquire from a 2D array much
>> faster than from a 1D list and much faster with a random-access-ish
>> selection mechanism than with an arrow-your-way-around mechanism, so
>> unless the items have names you can select via short unique prefixes...)

> If information is textual chances are that incremental search would have
> worked better.

Information is often not textual, or not solely textual. Textual
information often lacks short unique prefixes on each item, or one
doesn't quickly remember the one desired. It's faster to recognize a
particular icon, if that's unique to your target, than to recognize a
particular short snippet of text, even if that's also unique, since the
latter is made of nonunique individual letters.

>> and actions in a graphics-manipulation context (Photoshop, mainly).

> Except that graphics professionals use pen tablets. You know why?
> They don't require feedback from screen. Pen tablets have absolute
> positioning unlike mouses which have relative positioning. This means
> that pen tablet reproduces your motion exactly, you don't need to follow
> cursor to draw a curve you want.

That's when drawing freehand rather than doing something else, such as
dragging pre-created image fragments around and assembling them in some
manner or applying filters, etc.

There's more sorts of graphics work than you seem to be assuming.

Also, pen tablets are expensive. The last time I saw any in a store the
cheapest was 4-5x the cost of a decent mouse. Not everyone is going to
spring for something like that. Particularly among those who work with
graphics a fair bit but *not* in a capacity where they get paid to do
so, or at least to do so very often.


 
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Pascal J. Bourguignon  
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 More options May 10 2012, 9:18 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: "Pascal J. Bourguignon" <p...@informatimago.com>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 15:18:42 +0200
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 9:18 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp

Jumpin' Jehoshaphat <jj1058672...@gmail.com> writes:
>> Writing a novel is just so much typing; so automate it!

> That's data entry, not command inputs.

You have a problem pal!  Code = Data !!!

--
__Pascal Bourguignon__                     http://www.informatimago.com/
A bad day in () is better than a good day in {}.


 
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Jumpin' Jehoshaphat  
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 More options May 10 2012, 9:45 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Jumpin' Jehoshaphat <jj1058672...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 09:45:41 -0400
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 9:45 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 10/05/2012 9:18 AM, Pascal J. Bourguignon wrote:

> Jumpin' Jehoshaphat<jj1058672...@gmail.com>  writes:

>>> Writing a novel is just so much typing; so automate it!

>> That's data entry, not command inputs.

> You have a problem pal!

Classic unsubstantiated and erroneous claim.

> Code = Data !!!

And indeed typing in code is a form of data entry. But directly issuing
single-gesture (control-key, mouse-click) commands to be executed
immediately is not really comparable when it comes to the whole "is it a
good idea to do it blind/while the interface display lags behind?" issue.

 
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Tim Bradshaw  
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 More options May 10 2012, 10:08 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Tim Bradshaw <t...@tfeb.org>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 15:08:02 +0100
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 10:08 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 2012-05-10 08:34:29 +0000, Alex Mizrahi said:

> Huh? At school level people work with concrete numbers, but on more
> advanced level there are barely any numbers in formulas.
> I don't know much above physics above school level, but I've got M.Sc.
> applied math degree without being particularly good at arithmetics.

Well yes.  It turns out that in physics numbers do matter.  A very
important skill (which people are explicitly taught) is to be able to
have a feeling for whether something is "reasonable" which can mean
various things, but often means "is it about the right size?" and that
requires, among other things, the ability to get numerical estimates of
stuff very quickly.  And although you are almost never doing literal
arithmetic (you're typically just trying to get an answer which is
right to an order of magnitude and some kind of notion of how rough the
answer is), you really can't do this without being pretty competent at
arithmetic, it turns out.

If you want a really good example of this there are several in
Feynman's autobiographical books.  Obviously he was better than most.

It's very tempting to say "oh, none of this matters now, you just use a
computer" but that turns out not to be right for reasons I'm too tired
to explain now, but are, I think, well-known.

>> I know this because at a slightly different level it's what happened to
>> me: I was lazy, didn't practice enough boring mathematical methods
>> stuff, and that lack of fluency came back and bit me later.

> Math =/= arithmetics.

I am aware of the difference.  That's why I said "at a slightly
different level".

 
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Tim Bradshaw  
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 More options May 10 2012, 10:11 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Tim Bradshaw <t...@tfeb.org>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 15:11:34 +0100
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 10:11 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 2012-05-10 12:53:39 +0000, Jumpin' Jehoshaphat said:

> Data entry, of a sort, not command entry.

I see.  How conveneient for you.

 
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Tim Bradshaw  
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 More options May 10 2012, 10:21 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Tim Bradshaw <t...@tfeb.org>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 15:21:30 +0100
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 10:21 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 2012-05-10 11:32:37 +0000, Alex Mizrahi said:

> In reality it's more like
> 1. rm -rf fro<TAB>
> 2. look whether it was completed, there is a list of options or ...
> 3. when everything looks OK press enter.

And even that is not what people do: they have typed and executed the
whole command before they have time to think.  I do this (as I've
discovered), and the interesting thing is that, after a while, although
you do execute things you should not have, you (almost) never do it in
a state where it matters.

 
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Tim Bradshaw  
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 More options May 10 2012, 10:33 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Tim Bradshaw <t...@tfeb.org>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 15:33:30 +0100
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 10:33 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 2012-05-10 12:53:08 +0000, Jumpin' Jehoshaphat said:

> So it's either toolbar buttons, an emacsesque bestiary of
> impossible-to-memorize-them-all control-key combinations most of which
> have no mnemonic connection with what they insert, or typing in verbose
> markup like TeX code. (TeX editors sometimes give you the choice
> between the toolbar buttons and manually typing in TeX markup. Useful
> if you memorize the most commonly needed markup but can then just dig
> in the toolbar drop-downs for less-often-used symbols instead of having
> to task switch to a cheat-sheet, read some possibly-long string, switch
> back, and type it, or copy and paste it.)

I'd guess that you've never typed any significant amount of maths.  I
have, and TeX is just enormously faster than any kind of pick-and-drop
thing.  Even now, nearly 30 years after doing any large amount of
stuff, and something like 20 years after really even using TeX much, I
can look at even quite complex expressions and type them, and very
often not have to fix anything.  It was designed by someoene who typed
maths, and that really shows (troff may be as good, I just never learnt
more than you needed to make a man page).

 
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Tim Bradshaw  
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 More options May 10 2012, 10:39 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Tim Bradshaw <t...@tfeb.org>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 15:39:58 +0100
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 10:39 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 2012-05-10 13:45:41 +0000, Jumpin' Jehoshaphat said:

> And indeed typing in code is a form of data entry. But directly issuing
> single-gesture (control-key, mouse-click) commands to be executed
> immediately is not really comparable when it comes to the whole "is it
> a good idea to do it blind/while the interface display lags behind?"
> issue.

See my earlier message.  I make my living typing commands at machines,
in a context where mistakes can be expensive.  I type blind all the
time, and so do other people I know (I only discovered this recently by
observing what I do and then asking other people doing the same job).

 
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Jumpin' Jehoshaphat  
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 More options May 10 2012, 10:51 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Jumpin' Jehoshaphat <jj1058672...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 10:51:11 -0400
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 10:51 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 10/05/2012 10:21 AM, Tim Bradshaw wrote:

> On 2012-05-10 11:32:37 +0000, Alex Mizrahi said:

>> In reality it's more like
>> 1. rm -rf fro<TAB>
>> 2. look whether it was completed, there is a list of options or ...
>> 3. when everything looks OK press enter.

> And even that is not what people do: they have typed and executed the
> whole command before they have time to think. I do this (as I've
> discovered), and the interesting thing is that, after a while, although
> you do execute things you should not have, you (almost) never do it in a
> state where it matters.

Perhaps, but when it's sometimes "rm -rf", "almost never" isn't going to
be good enough.

 
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Jumpin' Jehoshaphat  
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 More options May 10 2012, 10:52 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Jumpin' Jehoshaphat <jj1058672...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 10:52:33 -0400
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 10:52 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 10/05/2012 10:39 AM, Tim Bradshaw wrote:

> On 2012-05-10 13:45:41 +0000, Jumpin' Jehoshaphat said:

>> And indeed typing in code is a form of data entry. But directly
>> issuing single-gesture (control-key, mouse-click) commands to be
>> executed immediately is not really comparable when it comes to the
>> whole "is it a good idea to do it blind/while the interface display
>> lags behind?" issue.

> See my earlier message. I make my living typing commands at machines, in
> a context where mistakes can be expensive. I type blind all the time,

Why? Are you using old, obsolete, slow equipment or an old, obsolete,
slow network protocol that makes the input/feedback loop take a round
trip to the server and not just complete commands?

 
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Jumpin' Jehoshaphat  
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 More options May 10 2012, 10:54 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Jumpin' Jehoshaphat <jj1058672...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 10:54:50 -0400
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 10:54 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 10/05/2012 10:33 AM, Tim Bradshaw wrote:

> On 2012-05-10 12:53:08 +0000, Jumpin' Jehoshaphat said:

>> So it's either toolbar buttons, an emacsesque bestiary of
>> impossible-to-memorize-them-all control-key combinations most of which
>> have no mnemonic connection with what they insert, or typing in
>> verbose markup like TeX code. (TeX editors sometimes give you the
>> choice between the toolbar buttons and manually typing in TeX markup.
>> Useful if you memorize the most commonly needed markup but can then
>> just dig in the toolbar drop-downs for less-often-used symbols instead
>> of having to task switch to a cheat-sheet, read some possibly-long
>> string, switch back, and type it, or copy and paste it.)

> I'd guess that you've never typed any significant amount of maths.

Then you'd guess wrong.

> I have, and TeX is just enormously faster than any kind of pick-and-drop
> thing.

It is if there's a convenient way to get at infrequently-used stuff you
haven't got memorized. Ideally, a visual way so you can find the symbol
you want by sight and click it. And then if you're starting to use that
one a lot, or a lot in that particular document, you note what it pasted
when you did that and type it the next time.

But if you have to task switch to some cheat sheet (likely a giant
bloated pdf file open in giant bloated Acrobat Reader, bletch) every
time you want to find the code for some symbol you don't remember it
will be much slower than if you can open some palette and click it in
that when you don't remember the code to type.


 
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Kaz Kylheku  
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 More options May 10 2012, 10:59 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Kaz Kylheku <k...@kylheku.com>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 14:59:32 +0000 (UTC)
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 10:59 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 2012-05-10, Jumpin' Jehoshaphat <jj1058672...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On 10/05/2012 4:46 AM, Alex Mizrahi wrote:
>>> ALL actions require feedback! I don't want to blindly issue commands to
>>> my computer while not even looking to see if it's gone into Sorceror's
>>> Apprentice mode deleting the wrong files or something.

>> The difference is that with mouse you need feedback for each action, you
>> need feedback immediately as it blocks you.

>> But with keyboards you can issue multiple keypresses at once and look
>> for results later. So this check can be postponed.

> As mentioned in another post, this can be useful for data entry on an
> old, cruddy, lagged system or a laggy oldfashioned telnet connection.

You missed the part about there being lag that cannot be eliminated.
Even if your computer's interactive response time is a nanosecond,
there is lag in the brain.

Anything that is blocked on the human having to make a conscious decision is
looking at a 500 millisecond response (Libet's half second delay).

Training to do things unconsciously brings that down, but not to zero.


 
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Jumpin' Jehoshaphat  
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 More options May 10 2012, 11:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Jumpin' Jehoshaphat <jj1058672...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 11:00:25 -0400
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 11:00 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 10/05/2012 10:59 AM, Kaz Kylheku wrote:

No, *you* missed the part about the proficient FPS players whose mouse
use is not hampered by that lag.

 
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Kaz Kylheku  
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 More options May 10 2012, 11:10 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Kaz Kylheku <k...@kylheku.com>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 15:10:23 +0000 (UTC)
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 11:10 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 2012-05-10, Alex Mizrahi <alex.mizr...@gmail.com> wrote:

>> ALL actions require feedback! I don't want to blindly issue commands to
>> my computer while not even looking to see if it's gone into Sorceror's
>> Apprentice mode deleting the wrong files or something.

> The difference is that with mouse you need feedback for each action, you
> need feedback immediately as it blocks you.

I'm afraid we have been, as I suspected,  wasting time responding to Seamus
MacRae, a.k.a. Oxide Scrubber, Series Expansion, etc.

The wacky pseudonym, low intelligence, and overall style give it away.


 
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Sound Hound  
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 More options May 10 2012, 11:32 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
Followup-To: comp.os.os2.advocacy
From: Sound Hound <roundbo...@mound.com>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 11:32:49 -0400
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 11:32 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 10/05/2012 11:10 AM, Kaz Kylheku wrote:
1> Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp

1> I'm afraid we have been, as I suspected,  wasting time responding to
Seamus
1> MacRae, a.k.a. Oxide Scrubber, Series Expansion, etc.

Who is "Seamus MacRae", Kylheku? There is nobody in this newsgroup using
that alias.

1> The wacky pseudonym, low intelligence, and overall style give it away.

What do your classic erroneous presuppositions have to do with Lisp,
Kylheku?


 
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Tim Bradshaw  
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 More options May 10 2012, 11:41 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Tim Bradshaw <t...@tfeb.org>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 16:41:49 +0100
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 11:41 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 2012-05-10 14:51:11 +0000, Jumpin' Jehoshaphat said:

> Perhaps, but when it's sometimes "rm -rf", "almost never" isn't going
> to be good enough.

It'd good enough if it is below whatever else kills the system, which
it seems to be.

 
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Tim Bradshaw  
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 More options May 10 2012, 11:43 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Tim Bradshaw <t...@tfeb.org>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 16:43:35 +0100
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 11:43 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 2012-05-10 14:52:33 +0000, Jumpin' Jehoshaphat said:

> Why? Are you using old, obsolete, slow equipment or an old, obsolete,
> slow network protocol that makes the input/feedback loop take a round
> trip to the server and not just complete commands?

Sorry, what I meant was "type and enter commands without long enough to
become consciously aware of mistakes".  The systems can echo fast
enough, I just can't proces the information.

 
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Tim Bradshaw  
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 More options May 10 2012, 11:45 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Tim Bradshaw <t...@tfeb.org>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 16:45:19 +0100
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 11:45 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 2012-05-10 15:10:23 +0000, Kaz Kylheku said:

> I'm afraid we have been, as I suspected,  wasting time responding to Seamus
> MacRae, a.k.a. Oxide Scrubber, Series Expansion, etc.

I prefer my brain-eating virus theory, but there's no real difference
in practice.

 
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Tim Bradshaw  
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 More options May 10 2012, 11:50 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Tim Bradshaw <t...@tfeb.org>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 16:50:26 +0100
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 11:50 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 2012-05-10 14:54:50 +0000, Jumpin' Jehoshaphat said:

> It is if there's a convenient way to get at infrequently-used stuff you
> haven't got memorized.

Right, we call that The TeXbook (or the AMSTeX manual, or whatever). I
guess I would have referred to it once a day or so when I typed maths
seriously, may be less.  For anything you use that seldom it hardly
matters what it is.

 
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Tim Bradshaw  
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 More options May 10 2012, 12:00 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Tim Bradshaw <t...@tfeb.org>
Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 17:00:30 +0100
Local: Thurs, May 10 2012 12:00 pm
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp
On 2012-05-10 15:50:26 +0000, Tim Bradshaw said:

> For anything you use that seldom it hardly matters what it is.

I take that back: it does not matter what it is *so long as it uses no
screen space*.

 
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nick_keighley_nos...@hotmail.com  
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 More options May 11 2012, 4:57 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: nick_keighley_nos...@hotmail.com
Date: Fri, 11 May 2012 01:57:56 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Fri, May 11 2012 4:57 am
Subject: Re: Learning Lisp

On Thursday, May 10, 2012 12:44:17 PM UTC+1, Tim Bradshaw wrote:
> On 2012-05-10 04:04:42 +0000, Kaz Kylheku said:

> > Why, drag and drop. You have icons on the desktop for all possible characters,
> > and then you just drag them one by one to the script icon.

> You think that's a joke, but have you seen any of the maths editors
> people use? A lot of them are just like that.

ever seen a chinese typewriter?

 
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