gnominator-develop Mailing List for GNOME Illuminator
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From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-06-09 03:45:39
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The report this afternoon consists of two parts, one is project report, which I will do on behalf of the team; and there is a personal report, which is made by one of the members. Does anyone want to take the job? Won't be long, a few minutes will be okay. |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-06-08 14:56:44
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I removed two commits just now. With no disrespect and I am not aiming at anyone, but I want you to follow the coding style of existing code before committing. I spent hours cleaning the code tonight and I am just annoyed. And please write a meaningful commit message at the first line. I will take similar actions in the future. |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-06-08 14:40:26
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And, the most important thing: do one thing in a commit so that it will be clear what you are doing. On 06/08/2010 10:27 PM, Ryan Li wrote: > I removed two commits just now. > With no disrespect and I am not aiming at anyone, but I want you to > follow the coding style of existing code before committing. I spent > hours cleaning the code tonight and I am just annoyed. > And please write a meaningful commit message at the first line. > > I will take similar actions in the future. |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-06-05 07:15:34
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Hi all, It seems that the project is eventually resurrected from nearly two months' deadly silence. A good move, but not much time left. I reviewed the commits and have some remarks here. 1. We now have functions of rotating images (to antiAgainst: flipping could be added of course?), loading large images will remain with fit size (which is immature yet), and remembering last folder (however it would be lost after restarting). Thank you. 2. Before submitting your work, MAKE SURE that you have followed existing coding standards, which includes the position of braces, spaces on the side of operators, naming and order of variables and functions. Check my recent commit of fixing such things. 3. The changes are only extra small functions, which aren't that useful enough. I regard this project as a practice of the things taught on the class, and what you do is only C++ programming with Gtkmm libraries. Using gettext to do internationalization could be an interesting point, and will add some colour to my report. If you still want to contribute, here is a list of tasks: https://sourceforge.net/apps/trac/gnominator/report/1 I know some will be difficult, but if you are interested any of them, I would appreciate it if you get contact with me before working. Ryan Li |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-04-14 06:12:36
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It seems that none of you are interested. So I created one, and now the homepage redirects there: http://gnominator.sourceforge.net Wang Pei and I added some contents there, check them out if you have time. Ryan Li |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-04-09 12:12:44
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Exactly. So... anyone interested in taking the job? Ryan Li On 04/09/2010 07:00 PM, Yuan Pengfei wrote: > I see. > What we need is a hosted app(trac) and someone to maintain it. |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-04-09 10:23:14
|
The built-in functions of SF provide REALLY BAD usability. Have you checked it out? What do you want WordPress for? SF supports MySQL and other database systems. As for a full list, here is a reference: http://sourceforge.net/apps/trac/sourceforge/wiki/Project%20web Ryan Li On 04/09/2010 05:45 PM, Yuan Pengfei wrote: > I don't think we need a trac or similar system on our homepage. > SF.net provides us with enough functions. > My idea is to use a CMS such as wordpress. > Does SF.net support database? |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-04-09 07:31:12
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Hi all, I need someone to help building the project's website. What we have currently is very simple, as you can see here: http://gnominator.sourceforge.net. We should use trac or similar project management systems. SF supports PHP and other script languages. Is there anyone to help? Please reply. We need to get it ready before next Wednesday. Ryan Li |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-04-09 05:45:13
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Hi, I am aware of this, since most of you are new to the FOSS world. But one thing I need to state is that: this mailing list is only for the project's development, and not about the learning how to program. However, of course, if you have problems with developing under GNU/Linux, feel free to send me a private email, and I'd be willing to help. You need to help yourself to have the basic concepts about developing under GNU/Linux. Basic understanding of shell scripts and usage of gcc/g++ would be sufficient to contribute. Gtkmm is not hard, and you can follow the other code. There would also be other deputies that are not much related to programming, like maintaining the website. Ryan Li On 04/05/2010 10:48 AM, 刘河 wrote: > maybe half of us are unfamilier with linux-programming,so the first step > should be "what to read and how to do it".After all, it is my personal > opinion. |
From: 刘河 <lhd...@gm...> - 2010-04-05 02:48:40
|
2010/4/5 Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> > Hi, > > A discussion would be nice, but what topics to discuss about would be > the first thing to be discussed, isn't it? > Maybe you could think of some and he could think of some. > And as Yuan Pengfei said, we could discuss on IRC or on this list. > > Guys, what do you think? > > Ryan Li > > > On 04/04/10 15:31, Wang Pei wrote: > > I think it's time for us to have a meeting about our project, for we > > have to know what to do about it. Ryan has got some ideas, and I > > suppose you guys should think about them. When are you free? > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Download Intel® Parallel Studio Eval > Try the new software tools for yourself. Speed compiling, find bugs > proactively, and fine-tune applications for parallel performance. > See why Intel Parallel Studio got high marks during beta. > http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-sw-dev > _______________________________________________ > gnominator-develop mailing list > gno...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gnominator-develop > maybe half of us are unfamilier with linux-programming,so the first step should be "what to read and how to do it".After all, it is my personal opinion. -- 每天学术一点点,生活美好一点点 |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-04-04 16:45:49
|
Hi, A discussion would be nice, but what topics to discuss about would be the first thing to be discussed, isn't it? Maybe you could think of some and he could think of some. And as Yuan Pengfei said, we could discuss on IRC or on this list. Guys, what do you think? Ryan Li On 04/04/10 15:31, Wang Pei wrote: > I think it's time for us to have a meeting about our project, for we > have to know what to do about it. Ryan has got some ideas, and I > suppose you guys should think about them. When are you free? |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-04-04 16:44:42
|
Hi, Nice step! I just got my OpenVPN working and can now get to SF. You and Yuan Pengfei are both added. Ryan Li On 04/04/10 23:26, 刘河 wrote: > User ID: > > *2868172* > Login Name (User Name): > > *lhdgriver* |
From: 刘河 <lhd...@gm...> - 2010-04-04 15:26:52
|
User ID: *2868172* Login Name (User Name): *lhdgriver* -- 每天学术一点点,生活美好一点点 |
From: Wang P. <ur...@gm...> - 2010-04-04 09:22:12
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I think it's time for us to have a meeting about our project, for we have to know what to do about it. Ryan has got some ideas, and I suppose you guys should think about them. When are you free? |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-04-01 14:26:10
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Hi, This is a method for a developer who doesn't have write access to the git repo to submit patches. Ryan Li On 01/04/10 22:11, Yuan Pengfei wrote: > " If you want to commit to the project, you can have your branch on somewhere else(e.g. GitHub), and send a pull request to the mailing list. If the developers think you commit is good, he/she will merge it to our tree." |
From: Y. P. <co...@qq...> - 2010-04-01 14:14:37
|
What does this mean? (http://gnominator.sourceforge.net/) " If you want to commit to the project, you can have your branch on somewhere else(e.g. GitHub), and send a pull request to the mailing list. If the developers think you commit is good, he/she will merge it to our tree." ------------------ http://hi.baidu.com/coolypf ------------------ Original ------------------ From: "Ryan Li"<ry...@ry...>; Date: Thu, Apr 1, 2010 10:00 PM To: "gnominator-develop"<gno...@li...>; Subject: Re: [gnominator-develop] Some advice Hi, Github is better at controlling small personal projects, but is not good for team work. If someone really has trouble getting access to git, he/she could find a pal help him/her maintain a mirror inside CERNET, but that would be troublesome. By the way, it should be `SOCKS proxy' if anyone is interested in that solution. Ryan Li On 01/04/10 21:26, Yuan Pengfei wrote: > 1. Google for "git via sock proxy", solution is available for both linux and windows. > > > 2. Or commit to googlecode, and import it in github. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Download IntelParallel Studio Eval Try the new software tools for yourself. Speed compiling, find bugs proactively, and fine-tune applications for parallel performance. See why Intel Parallel Studio got high marks during beta. http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-sw-dev _______________________________________________ gnominator-develop mailing list gno...@li... https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gnominator-develop |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-04-01 14:00:23
|
Hi, Github is better at controlling small personal projects, but is not good for team work. If someone really has trouble getting access to git, he/she could find a pal help him/her maintain a mirror inside CERNET, but that would be troublesome. By the way, it should be `SOCKS proxy' if anyone is interested in that solution. Ryan Li On 01/04/10 21:26, Yuan Pengfei wrote: > 1. Google for "git via sock proxy", solution is available for both linux and windows. > > > 2. Or commit to googlecode, and import it in github. |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-04-01 12:37:00
|
Seems to be a realistic issue for many.... So these are my thoughts: From the project's aspect, I don't want it to be just a toy software written by a group of university students who do it just for getting credits, and throw it away when they finish the course. If everything goes fine, the development should continue for a long time. And since it's not a closed-community work, it needs to be opened to the public, so that people outside could use it, and contribute to it. That's the reason I didn't put it on school's server. And among the public hosting websites, Google Code is the only one within CERNET-free IP range that I know. I have considered it. A project I am now working on is, and several personal projects of mine were hosted there. But the version control systems (VCS) it supplies are only subversion and mercurial. Not much I can say about mercurial (never used it except cloning), but subversion is really inadequate for development nowadays. In comparison, git is a distributed VCS, and provides a more flexible environment for the developers. It's now used by the Linux kernel and most GNOME software, so I think adopting it would be a good idea. Besides, I think its concept is a good thing to learn. Anyway, a personal favourite. You will need to try it out in development, and at the best compare it with subversion, and then tell whether it's worth it. I did have doubts on it before, since this distributed thing is much more complex than subversion, which you only need `svn update' and `svn commit' in most of the time. From a GNU/Linuxer's (or hacker's, whatever) personal aspect, it's also worthwhile for you to get access to the global Internet, instead of a small Intranet. Nearly none of the most important projects' websites are CERNET-free, and nearly none of the most important, prolific hackers live within this Intranet. I hope this course could be an incentive for you to broaden your view, to know what other hackers think, to see that how many projects have been raised in the FOSS society, why are they special, and how to use them in your daily life. Above all, I think we should just stay in SF. Regards, Ryan Li On 01/04/10 10:51, )emon[SvrGN]"<wan...@si...>" wrote: > No idea. But I get a feeling this stuff will be a great mess, especially when we have to do it on SF. > > Even though SF is a great platform for open-source software developing, gaining its access is a much greater problem. Is it really worth it? I have my doubts. > > Anyway, I'm not the one to call the shot. So, it's just my opinion. > > D:)emon[SvrGN],wan...@si... |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-04-01 12:09:10
|
Hi lads, The development has started a couple days ago, as you can see if you pulled from the repository. GNOME Illuminator is now capable of displaying an image. Building a basic, yet usable semi-prototype is the first step. The structure is not ready, so nothing much can be done now. And I hope to get it ready at the weekend, or next week. Don't be too eager to code. If you are new to Gtkmm, you may be interested in getting the code and have some practice in Gtkmm, since most of our GUI-related code would use Gtkmm and the likes, including Glibmm. Reading the code of other lightweight GNOME apps, e.g. gedit, totem, would also do a lot of favour for you. Later in the day(or night), I will create a TODO list under the root directory, so at anytime, you can find what tasks you are interested in, and take them. Generally, tasks won't be assigned. They are chosen. Of course, most of them will be unrealistic to tackle at this stage of development. This file, accompanied with the prototype I mentioned above, could be called as the `structure', or `idea' of this software as you like. It is the first time that I lead a project with arbitrarily gathered developers, and I have no idea what skills you have now. So it would be best if you (you all) could describe your experience in programming. On the discussion thing, what do you want to discuss? You could just ask questions on this list. Regards, Ryan Li On 31/03/10 22:38, Lei Zhang wrote: > When shall we begin the project? > Besides,any discussion needed? |
From: Wang P. <ur...@gm...> - 2010-04-01 09:21:04
|
So, a global IP costs too much to afford? I just can't imagine a CSer didn't own the access to the "outer" internet. Or maybe you are using Sougou browser? But that's not available on Unix-like platform. Taking into account that we are Linuxers, at least in this project, I personally suppose that a global IP is necessary. Of course, if most members think that's unacceptable, we can try to move our project to the platform which the teacher refered to in class. What say Ryan? D:)emon[SvrGN] wrote: > No idea. But I get a feeling this stuff will be a great mess, > especially when we have to do it on SF. > Even though SF is a great platform for open-source software > developing, gaining its access is a much greater problem. Is it really > worth it? I have my doubts. > Anyway, I'm not the one to call the shot. So, it's just my opinion. > D:)emon[SvrGN],wan...@si... > <mailto:%3C%21--AID_FROMADDRESS_BEGIN--%3Ew...@si...%3C%21--AID_FROMADDRESS_END--%3E> > 2010-04-01 > > ----- Original Message ----- > *From: *Lei Zhang <mailto:ant...@gm...> > *To: *gnominator-develop > <mailto:gno...@li...> > *Sent: *2010-03-31, 22:38:50 > *Subject: *[gnominator-develop] when to start > > When shall we begin the project? > Besides,any discussion needed? > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Download Intel® Parallel Studio Eval > Try the new software tools for yourself. Speed compiling, find bugs > proactively, and fine-tune applications for parallel performance. > See why Intel Parallel Studio got high marks during beta. > http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-sw-dev > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > gnominator-develop mailing list > gno...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gnominator-develop > |
From: Wang P. <ur...@gm...> - 2010-04-01 09:07:48
|
I think we should begin next week, and maybe we can have a discussion on next Monday? Lei Zhang wrote: > When shall we begin the project? > Besides,any discussion needed? > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Download Intel® Parallel Studio Eval > Try the new software tools for yourself. Speed compiling, find bugs > proactively, and fine-tune applications for parallel performance. > See why Intel Parallel Studio got high marks during beta. > http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-sw-dev > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > gnominator-develop mailing list > gno...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gnominator-develop > |
From: D:)emon[SvrGN]<wan...@si...> - 2010-04-01 02:52:13
|
No idea. But I get a feeling this stuff will be a great mess, especially when we have to do it on SF. Even though SF is a great platform for open-source software developing, gaining its access is a much greater problem. Is it really worth it? I have my doubts. Anyway, I'm not the one to call the shot. So, it's just my opinion. D:)emon[SvrGN],wan...@si... 2010-04-01 ----- Original Message ----- From: Lei Zhang To: gnominator-develop Sent: 2010-03-31, 22:38:50 Subject: [gnominator-develop] when to start When shall we begin the project? Besides,any discussion needed? |
From: Lei Z. <ant...@gm...> - 2010-03-31 14:39:01
|
When shall we begin the project? Besides,any discussion needed? |
From: heyijun19900531<hey...@16...> - 2010-03-29 15:27:00
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How? I don't have git. Jack He 2010-03-29 heyijun19900531 发件人: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> 发送时间: 2010-03-29 23:19 主 题: Re: [gnominator-develop] say hello to all 收件人: gnominator-develop <gno...@li...> Hi, I added you to the project, you can try it out. Ryan On 29/03/10 22:05, Lei Zhang wrote: > OK,finally I've get my account on SF.net...seems kind of late... > User ID:2860027 > Username:antiagainst > > antiagainst is the nick name I've used for a long time,my really name is > Zhang Lei.. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Download Intel® Parallel Studio Eval Try the new software tools for yourself. Speed compiling, find bugs proactively, and fine-tune applications for parallel performance. See why Intel Parallel Studio got high marks during beta. http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-sw-dev _______________________________________________ gnominator-develop mailing list gno...@li... https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gnominator-develop |
From: Ryan Li <ry...@ry...> - 2010-03-29 15:19:55
|
Hi, I added you to the project, you can try it out. Ryan On 29/03/10 22:05, Lei Zhang wrote: > OK,finally I've get my account on SF.net...seems kind of late... > User ID:2860027 > Username:antiagainst > > antiagainst is the nick name I've used for a long time,my really name is > Zhang Lei.. |