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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Information about Unix System Administration Post 302304962 by reborg on Tuesday 7th of April 2009 04:19:34 PM
Old 04-07-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by Neo
By questioning "germane to the discussion" I was talking about my comments (as perhaps drifting off topic), not your comments, reborg.

I find your comments excellent (as always) and excellent reading. I was concerned that I was the one changing the course of this excellent discussion.
I had the same thought about my own statement, it could read as a bit flippant in particular to someone like the OP who hasn't seen first hand the changes of the past 10-15 years from the inside.

hpicracing,

there is one other thing that all good SAs,systems programmers, integrators and Unix people in general have and you should not underestimate this one: A complete hard-headed determination to make things that don't quite fit together work, it's almost as much the attitude as the code that forms the "glue" described by Neo.
 

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MDOM::Token::Comment(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				 MDOM::Token::Comment(3pm)

NAME
MDOM::Token::Comment - A comment in Makefile source code INHERITANCE
MDOM::Token::Comment isa MDOM::Token isa MDOM::Element SYNOPSIS
# This is a MDOM::Token::Comment foo: bar # So is this one echo 'hello' DESCRIPTION
In MDOM, comments are represented by "MDOM::Token::Comment" objects. These come in two flavours, line comment and inline comments. A "line comment" is a comment that stands on its own line. These comments hold their own newline and whitespace (both leading and trailing) as part of the one "MDOM::Token::Comment" object. An inline comment is a comment that appears after some code, and continues to the end of the line. This does not include whitespace, and the terminating newlines is considered a separate MDOM::Token::Whitespace token. This is largely a convenience, simplifying a lot of normal code relating to the common things people do with comments. Most commonly, it means when you "prune" or "delete" a comment, a line comment disappears taking the entire line with it, and an inline comment is removed from the inside of the line, allowing the newline to drop back onto the end of the code, as you would expect. It also means you can move comments around in blocks much more easily. For now, this is a suitably handy way to do things. However, I do reserve the right to change my mind on this one if it gets dangerously anachronistic somewhere down the line. METHODS
Only very limited methods are available, beyond those provided by our parent MDOM::Token and MDOM::Element classes. line The "line" accessor returns true if the "MDOM::Token::Comment" is a line comment, or false if it is an inline comment. SUPPORT
See the support section in the main module. AUTHOR
Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org> COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2001 - 2006 Adam Kennedy. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module. perl v5.12.4 2011-08-28 MDOM::Token::Comment(3pm)
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