diff options
| -rw-r--r-- | etc/DEVEL.HUMOR | 136 |
1 files changed, 136 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/etc/DEVEL.HUMOR b/etc/DEVEL.HUMOR new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..4e802312c83 --- /dev/null +++ b/etc/DEVEL.HUMOR | |||
| @@ -0,0 +1,136 @@ | |||
| 1 | ---------------- -*- mode: text; coding: utf-8; fill-column: 70 -*- -- | ||
| 2 | -- -- | ||
| 3 | -- Humor (sometimes unintended) on the Emacs developer's list -- | ||
| 4 | -- -- | ||
| 5 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 6 | |||
| 7 | "Is it legal for a `struct interval' to have a total_length field of | ||
| 8 | zero?" | ||
| 9 | "We can't be arrested for it as far as I know, but it is definitely | ||
| 10 | invalid for an interval to have zero length." | ||
| 11 | -- Miles Bader and RMS | ||
| 12 | |||
| 13 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 14 | |||
| 15 | Re: lost argument and doc string | ||
| 16 | |||
| 17 | I remember when I lost an argument. Boy did that hurt! ;-). | ||
| 18 | -- RMS | ||
| 19 | |||
| 20 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 21 | |||
| 22 | "'Cowardly' is not an adverb, although it looks like one. It is an | ||
| 23 | adjective. It makes a statement about general temperament, rather | ||
| 24 | than a specific occasion. I don't think Emacs has a general | ||
| 25 | temperament." | ||
| 26 | "Mine does." | ||
| 27 | -- RMS and Eli Zaretskii | ||
| 28 | |||
| 29 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 30 | |||
| 31 | "In order to bring the user's attention to the minibuffer when an | ||
| 32 | item such as 'Edit -> Search' is activated from the menu, I was just | ||
| 33 | thinking that we could draw a big rectangle around the minibuffer, | ||
| 34 | blinking (or zooming in-and-out) until some input is typed in." | ||
| 35 | "How about dancing elephants?" | ||
| 36 | "They don't fit in my office." | ||
| 37 | "Well once the elephants are done, your office will be much... | ||
| 38 | bigger." | ||
| 39 | -- Stefan Monnier, Miles Bader and Kai Grossjohann | ||
| 40 | |||
| 41 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 42 | |||
| 43 | I remember these versions as yard-rocks (is that between inch-pebbles | ||
| 44 | and mile-stones?). | ||
| 45 | -- Kai Grossjohann | ||
| 46 | |||
| 47 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 48 | |||
| 49 | "I think it depends on video drivers. I cannot reproduce it on my | ||
| 50 | home PC, but I can at work." | ||
| 51 | "Can you try to find a workaround at work? (I guess you don't need | ||
| 52 | a homearound at home. ;-)" | ||
| 53 | -- Jason Rumney and RMS | ||
| 54 | |||
| 55 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 56 | |||
| 57 | By the way, I also really really hate this unibyte/multibyte problem. | ||
| 58 | Sometimes I think I should have opposed to the introduction of such a | ||
| 59 | concept more strongly. | ||
| 60 | |||
| 61 | imagine there's no unibyte | ||
| 62 | it's easy if you try | ||
| 63 | no bytes below us | ||
| 64 | above us only chars | ||
| 65 | imagine all the people living in multibyte | ||
| 66 | |||
| 67 | -- Kenichi Handa | ||
| 68 | |||
| 69 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 70 | |||
| 71 | I try to uphold the ideals that I was taught to value as an American, | ||
| 72 | but every year I get less and less help from the United States. | ||
| 73 | -- RMS | ||
| 74 | |||
| 75 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 76 | |||
| 77 | "If the terminfo entry is most likely wrong, and we know it, then it | ||
| 78 | doesn't make sense to follow it." | ||
| 79 | "Nevertheless, until now, we always did." | ||
| 80 | "So.... should we not fix old bugs?" | ||
| 81 | "Why fix an old bug if you can write three new ones in the same | ||
| 82 | time?" | ||
| 83 | -- Miles Bader, Eli Zaretskii and David Kastrup | ||
| 84 | |||
| 85 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 86 | |||
| 87 | [...] As is well known, people who speak American English tend to | ||
| 88 | be more resource-conscious and try to avoid wasting precious bits | ||
| 89 | transferring those redundant "u"s. | ||
| 90 | Think of the number of occurrences of "color" and "behavior" in the | ||
| 91 | Emacs tarball, multiply that by the number of times it'll be | ||
| 92 | downloaded, stored on hard disks, archived, ...that's a substantial | ||
| 93 | saving. | ||
| 94 | -- Stefan Monnier | ||
| 95 | |||
| 96 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 97 | |||
| 98 | Re: Parent of a derived mode's keymap. | ||
| 99 | |||
| 100 | "I can't decide whether the title of this thread is more fitting for | ||
| 101 | a blues song or a pulp fiction booklet. It certainly projects drama." | ||
| 102 | "Hey, it says derived, not deprived." | ||
| 103 | "Actually, for some keymaps 'depraved' would fit better." | ||
| 104 | "I knew it! You're one of them vi lovers! There is nothing wrong | ||
| 105 | with Emacs using escape, meta, alt, control, and shift!" | ||
| 106 | -- David Kastrup and Lute Kamstra | ||
| 107 | |||
| 108 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 109 | |||
| 110 | "Aren't user-defined constants useful in other languages?" | ||
| 111 | "The only user-defined constant is ignorance. (With programmers, | ||
| 112 | this is a variable concept ;-)" | ||
| 113 | -- Juanma Barranquero and Thien-Thi Nguyen | ||
| 114 | |||
| 115 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 116 | |||
| 117 | "Uh, 'archaic' and 'alive' is not a contradiction." | ||
| 118 | "Yes it is. 'Archaic' does not mean 'old' or 'early'. It means | ||
| 119 | 'obsolete'." | ||
| 120 | "'He arche' in Greek means 'the beginning'. John 1 starts off with | ||
| 121 | 'En arche en ho Logos': in the beginning, there was the word. Now of | ||
| 122 | course we all know that Emacs was there before Word, but this might | ||
| 123 | have escaped John's notice." | ||
| 124 | -- David Kastrup and RMS | ||
| 125 | |||
| 126 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
| 127 | |||
| 128 | "Sorry for the long message. I wanted to make the problem clear | ||
| 129 | also for people not familiar with `woman'." | ||
| 130 | "Most hackers, I take? | ||
| 131 | For a moment there I thought you had a patch that you could put on | ||
| 132 | a woman, and it would make her come right to the topic at point | ||
| 133 | without attempting any course of action that requires an advance | ||
| 134 | course in divination. | ||
| 135 | There'd be quite a sensational market for that, you know." | ||
| 136 | -- Emilio Lopes and David Kastrup | ||