If you have code that can "recognise" the "spaces", and then change the colour you might as well just place the parallax font characters ,as I suggested before,
Heya fellers. I'm back on line finally and just had a chance to catch up with the latest threads.
bst *could* have those funky little block indent arrows. There are plenty of hooks in the rendering to add stuff like that in, it's just that I never used them (or found them useful myself) and they are a little more intensive to process in the highlighter. I'd have to re-write the highlighter to do it properly and I've really just had no incentive to do it.
On another and completely unrelated note. SIL 3232 PCI-E SATA controllers can cause silent data corruption on Linux if you are using both channels simultaneously under high load (like say, oh part of an 8TB RAID-6 that holds your SVN repositories).
It's taken me months to piece all my source trees back together as my fantastic rotating backup system (14 days of daily / 4 weeks of weekly and 3 months of monthly) had rotated right through before I twigged that my intermittent data corruption across my music collection was the result of a more sinister silent menace. I'm going back to backing up on CDs then burying them 4ft underground in a lead box. While I'm at it I might put my savings back into that tin under the bed <grumble>
Comments
If you have code that can "recognise" the "spaces", and then change the colour you might as well just place the parallax font characters ,as I suggested before,
Dave M
Kedit isn't smart about it. If there is a space, it's just visible.
bst *could* have those funky little block indent arrows. There are plenty of hooks in the rendering to add stuff like that in, it's just that I never used them (or found them useful myself) and they are a little more intensive to process in the highlighter. I'd have to re-write the highlighter to do it properly and I've really just had no incentive to do it.
On another and completely unrelated note. SIL 3232 PCI-E SATA controllers can cause silent data corruption on Linux if you are using both channels simultaneously under high load (like say, oh part of an 8TB RAID-6 that holds your SVN repositories).
It's taken me months to piece all my source trees back together as my fantastic rotating backup system (14 days of daily / 4 weeks of weekly and 3 months of monthly) had rotated right through before I twigged that my intermittent data corruption across my music collection was the result of a more sinister silent menace. I'm going back to backing up on CDs then burying them 4ft underground in a lead box. While I'm at it I might put my savings back into that tin under the bed <grumble>
That's pretty nasty. Welcome back.
Great. Now that you are back in business what about that BSTC and BSTL build form ARM.
I have an IGEP ARM board running Ubuntu here that is itching to program an attached Propeller:)