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Everything Can Be Solved in Linux, Except…

August 4th, 2009 subogero Comments off

I still have a few problems I can’t solve. One is The Ubuntu-Firefox Font-Size Disaster. The whole internet is full of it, but no one seems to know the solution.

The problem is that on many web-pages the fonts are incredibly small. The funny thing is that Firefox on Windows displays theses pages perfectly. There are dodgy workarounds like overriding the web-page’s font settings or zoom in (and out, and in), but I can say only two words: Come On!

The other problem is the spacing and icon-size of the Ubuntu Main Menu. This monstrously huge and wasteful spacing even remains when I disable the menu icons altogether. Again, I found a lot of websites about themes and metacities and gtk, but I still have to figure out what these mysterious things mean. At least it all seems to be text-based, so I’ll find the solution one day…

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The Size of the Gnome Terminal

August 4th, 2009 subogero Comments off

It’s way too small. 80 x 25 in 2009? Utterly ridiculous.

But, as I heard before, everything can be solved in Linux, it just takes half an hour. I ended up at Maligree’s Weblog, who offers not one but 3 solutions to the problem, one for bash gurus, one for config wizards and another one for a mysterious Mister Rightclickalot.

I did all three and I’m a happy man.

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ogc – Reloaded on Linux

August 4th, 2009 subogero Comments off

I wanted to compile ogc for Linux first thing in the morning. Went surprisingly smoothly with a few tricks:

  • the target is called ogc, not ogc.exe
  • I had to remove the \r characters from each end-of-line of the usage and version text file sources
  • Installation to /usr/bin works only with the magic sudo command.

Later I added install, uninstall and clean rules, and prepared the makefile to run on both Linux and cygwin, detecting Windows from the presence of the SYSTEMROOT variable.

Finally I put it under revision control with git. But that’s another story.

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Installation Day, or Rather Night

August 4th, 2009 subogero Comments off

It’s no use to babble about reading books and writing Windows programs.
I still have not seen a real Unix.

After having taken some advice from an Ubuntu-fan in the office, I set out to download and write the Ubuntu-CD and install it. It was 8 o’clock in the evening.

First shot: run Ubuntu from the live CD. Not that scary. And looks bloody good, actually.

Second shot: the installation. The most heart stopping moment is when you’ve tried to set it up to shrink your Windows partition and install Ubuntu alongside with a boot-menu, and you  click OK. In the next 10 minutes you just keep your fingers crossed while Ubuntu is messing with all your precious data.

But it worked. After reboot I just double-checked Windows and, after a checkdisk, it ran perfectly, as much as possible for Windows.

Move on to Ubuntu. First impression: Gnome looks very good. Second impression: it’s extremely wasteful with my screen with the default settings. Third impression: the immediate-effect settings of Gnome are a Very Good Idea.

I went to bed at 2 in the morning with much smaller fonts, just one panel at the top with a few panel launchers (terminal, mc, firefox), a single-icon main-menu and the weather shown.

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ogc – The OG Calculator

July 29th, 2009 subogero Comments off

So my yacc studies led me to a series of thoughts about writing my own command-line calculator with integer arithmetics. Which the Windows Calculator is not.

I set the following goals:

  • 32-bit integer arithmetics (don’t ask me why, I just need it at work, OK?)
  • decimal, octal and hexadecimal formats
  • unlimited undo
  • a fair amount of memory registers
  • ability to continue from the last result (+5 should add 5 to the last result)
  • no mouse clicking
  • following Unix/GNU conventions

The program’s called ogc. I wrote it in yacc surprisingly quickly. The related info and the sources are available on my dedicated ogc page.

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yacc – Yet Another Compiler Compiler

July 29th, 2009 subogero Comments off

While reading esr’s book about UNIX and laziness, I found it referring to a mysterious “yacc” on many occasions. As if sed, awk, tr, ls, sudo et al were not confusing enough. I just could not resist and googled it. Voilá.

It turned out it was a high-level programming language to describe the grammar of, erm, a language, and parse it. It was created by Stephen C. Johnson back in 1973! The paper contains an appendix with an example of a simple command-line calculator.

Just try to imagine the horrors of parsing and executing simple mathematical expressions with a program written in the C language. For instance “-3*(5/2)-(5*-8)+1″.
Operator precedence, brackets, telling unary minus (-3) from the normal minus (6-2). I’d never try it.

But in yacc, the essence of the problem is solved in a few lines:

expr :    '('  expr  ')'
               {    $$  =  $2;  }
     |    expr  '+'  expr
               {    $$  =  $1  +  $3;  }
     |    expr  '-'  expr
               {    $$  =  $1  -  $3;  }
     |    expr  '*'  expr
               {    $$  =  $1  *  $3;  }
     |    expr  '/'  expr
               {    $$  =  $1  /  $3;  }
     |    '-'  expr        %prec  UMINUS
               {    $$  =  -  $2;  }
     |    number
     ;

This led me to a whole series of thoughts. But more of that next time…

Anyway, if yacc is yet another compiler-compiler, which was the previous compiler compiler?

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Master Foo

July 27th, 2009 subogero Comments off

Two must-reads:

Master Foo

Master Foo

The Tao of Programming

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The Art of UNIX Programming

July 25th, 2009 subogero Comments off

It’s not what I do.
It’s the title of a book.

I found it on the internet during my initial sed adventures. The author is Eric Steven Raymond. It’s absolutely brilliant. I have been working with embedded automotive software for ages. And although I’ve never had much to do with Unix, this book pretty much sums up everything I’ve come to believe in:

Keep it simple, stupid!

Do one thing well.

Separate policy from mechanism.

Write programs to write programs.

Text rulez.

Working programs before specs and optimisation.

Fold knowledge into data, use stupid algorithms.

Design for the future.

Distrust all claims for the One True Way.

Constructive laziness is the cardinal virtue of the master programmer.

Read more…

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Seduced by sed

July 25th, 2009 subogero Comments off

So I started searching the internet about the usage of sed, the ultimate stream editor. I found the number one site about the Awful Truth. If you have any question about sed, you’ll find the answer here. My favourites so far:

Simple replacement of “Windows” to “Linux”, sorry “foo” to “bar” with the magic s (substitution), go for all occurrences this time with flag g (global).

sed -e 's/foo/bar/g'

Use any other delimiter instead of slash, in this case the comma, if slash is used in any pattern.
Keep a part of a matched string defined by the brakets \( \) and using \1.
Let’s convert “c:” to “/cygdrive/c”.

sed -e 's, \([A-Za-z]\):, /cygdrive/\1,g'

You will also notice the presence of the dreaded regular expression above. I also learned that sed is a so-called filter. In streams the standard input, so sed takes the text you type, and writes the result to the terminal window.

And now comes the best part, at least for a rookie like me, the redirection wizardry. You can redirect sed’s input or output to any other file, or even any other program’s standard input or output.

For instance let’s copy the contents of foo.txt to bar.txt, but will all occurrences of “foo” replaced with “bar”.

sed -e 's/foo/bar/g' <foo.txt >bar.txt

Same operation but replace in the same file, foo.txt.

sed -e 's/foo/bar/g' -i foo.txt

And using the pipe and the command-quote you can do the same between environment variables, as well. The pipe “|” connects the output of the program on its left to the input of the one on its right. And the command quote ` ` redirects the final output to a variable.

BAR=`echo $FOO | sed -e 's/foo/bar/g'`

I think it’s obvious by now that I’m infected. I use the words “foo” and “bar”.

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cygwin – How it All Started

July 25th, 2009 subogero Comments off

At the very respectable company where I spend my days, we’ve been using a mysterious cygwin shell for building software projects. Don’t ask me why. I’d been wondering what the bash2.02> prompt was supposed to mean. Sometimes I overheard sentences about how good the GNU make was, or how cool it was to pipe sed into tr, but it’d be overstating the facts that I understood them.

Considering myself an embedded software wizard? Check.
Understanding our makefile? Nope.

Until the day came, when upgrading to the newest version of cygwin was proposed to achieve compatibility with a code-checking tool. And the loser to do this job was yours truly. So I upgraded and, guess what, our make ceased to work. After consulting some gurus in the office and the internet it turned out that cygwin had stopped supporting Win32 path formats altogether. Fantastic.

My beloved drive letters (C:\) were blown out of the window.
In came a weird /cygdrive/c/ format.
In case of a Unix-hacker, the terms root directory and mount-point spring to the lips.

It was suggested that I could fix this with the bloody sed in a matter of a few seconds, thank you very much.

And so it started…

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