Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Do You Play Video Games?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Do You Play Video Games? Post 302257230 by Ikon on Tuesday 11th of November 2008 05:15:14 PM
Old 11-11-2008
Urban Terror!! On Linux.
 

3 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Ubuntu

use VM to play games in Windows (Intense Games)

I have Ubunut installed on my desktop AMD 6 Core 3.2 (will be getting the bulldozer AMD 8 Core when it releases) 16 GB of DDR3 1333 RAM SSD some HDD's Nvidia 560 ti 1GB My question is, how can I or can I even get a Win 7 VM to play games as well in a main install. Give it 10 GBs of RAM... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ochieman2000
0 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Ffmpeg (avconv) + crtmpserver Linux streaming video, no player to play it

Hello Linux experts, I'm working on live video streaming project, and my job is to create video streaming server using Ubuntu 13.04 Here is what I've done so far: 1. Installed crtmpserver from Ubuntu's repositories. 2. Installed ffmpeg To test the server i use webcam as source of video,... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: +Yan
0 Replies

3. Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions

How to play video files one after the other continously?

Hi, There are many MP4 files in a folder say 50 files . All these files are video clipping files.Instead of playing the video one by one , is it possible to play all video clipping files into single shot ? Say for example when i play one video file it gets over after sometime and to view... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Maddy123
5 Replies
rakudo(1)						User Contributed Perl Documentation						 rakudo(1)

NAME
perl6 - Rakudo Perl 6 Compiler SYNOPSIS
perl6 [switches] [--] [programfile] [arguments] DESCRIPTION
With no arguments, enters a REPL. With a "[programfile]" or the "-e" option, compiles the given program and by default also executes the compiled code. -c check syntax only (runs BEGIN and CHECK blocks) -e program one line of program -h, --help display this help text -n run program once for each line of input -p same as -n, but also print $_ at the end of lines --target=[stage] specify compilation stage to emit -t, --trace=[flags] enable trace flags, see 'parrot --help-debug' --encoding=[mode] specify string encoding mode -o, --output=[name] specify name of output file -v, --version display version information --stagestats display time spent in the compilation stages --ll-backtrace display a low level backtrace on errors Note that only boolean single-letter options may be bundled Supported stages for --target are: parse past post pir evalpmc where parse = a representation of the parse tree past = an intermediate format representing the parrot abstract syntax tree post = an intermediate format representing the parrot opcode syntax tree pir = the parrot intermediate representation PARROT OPTIONS
To specify options to the underlying parrot VM, you must explicitly run parrot; you cannot specify these options by using the "perl6" executable. parrot [parrot switches] perl6.pbc [switches] [--] [programfile] [arguments] See "parrot --help" for a list of valid parrot options. AUTHORS
Written by the Rakudo contributors, see the CREDITS file. This manual page was written by Reini Urban, Moritz Lenz and the Rakudo contributors. perl v5.14.2 2012-01-22 rakudo(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:01 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy