Roger Evans wrote:
> Hmm, I think my attempts at remote debugging are rather losing the
> battle aren't they. I think i'd better leave you in more local hands....
>
> Roger
>
> david moss wrote:
>
>> Roger Evans wrote:
>>
>>> Ah, looks like you don't need the '+startup' in the command I
>>> suggested for you - $pop_pop11 handles that bit for you. So try
>>>
>>> pop11 ":setpop -> interrupt; sysinitcomp(); setpop()"
>>>
>>> roger
>>
>>
>>
>> Tried that, but pop11 dies after setpop(); for reasons unknown (no
>> mishap is thrown or any indication given). I know because I sent the
>> commands individually to test where the problem was.
>>
>> david.
>>
>>
>
>
>
I have put the code for the java app I'm making in my web page (link
below) It is *very* basic and its meant as a proof-of-concept, not as a
proper development anything in the hope that someone will know what is
going on.
http://studentweb.cs.bham.ac.uk/~ug57dsm/jedit/PopConsole.tar.gz
There is a makefile inside the .gz archive, just extract everything with
"tar -xvzf PopConsole.tar.gz" and type "make run" to see it in action
(assuming you have java properly set)
try sending some commands, like [hello world]=> or pr('this does
work');nl(1); which I know work. Then try the stuff that doesn't, like
"x + 1;" (where 'x' is undefined) or setpop(); (which makes it exit with
exitcode 0).
Once poplog is made to work I can get on with hacking a proper app and
then a plugin for jedit. :)
Hope someone has better luck than me.
regards,
david.
PS, the file Test.java in the root directory contains the main() method.
Inside this there are a series of commented lines which you can swap
around to check different incantations of poplog or bash at your leisure.
--
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