Friday, December 11, 2009
Simple Sabotage
A co-worker forwarded to me a copy of the OSS Simple Sabotage Field Manual. I have reproduced the section on organizational sabotage. It is hilarious, but frightening how many companies that I have worked for seem to follow such self-destructive advice on purpose!
Sunday, December 6, 2009
It seems the problem with
apropos
was a simple missing argument. I haven't hooked up the error handler yet, so this caused some really weird behavior. It's getting time to think about that. The MIT Scheme debugger uses some special operations to parse the runtime stack, so I have to make a reasonably faithful replication of this.
Friday, December 4, 2009
Innumeracy
I happened upon an article discussing glacial retreat and ice melt. At the end of the article there were several ‘glacial facts’. Here are some:
- Average yearly retreat of the Himalayan glaciers: In 2006, 30 metres;
- Rate at which Gangotri is melting per year: 28.1 m
- Gangotri Length: approx 30 km;
- Year in which Gangotri will disappear: 2050, if glacier melt continues at the same rate.(emphasis mine)
Thursday, December 3, 2009
More bugs
The bug with pretty printing turned out to be trivial. In a primitive where I was taking the
The current bug is more interesting. I got
The bug is weird, though. When I call
I can't for the life of me imagine what might cause this. I'm guessing that I really screwed up the definition of a primitive and it is causing a recursive evaluation of something. I'm grasping at straws, though. In any case, this will be fun to debug because it involves weak pointers. The CLR has weak pointers, but now I have to really make them mimic the weak pointers that MIT Scheme expects.
CAR
of an object, I returned the original object rather than the CAR
. Stupid.The current bug is more interesting. I got
apropos
working, but the next day Taylor changed how symbols are interned. apropos
worked for one day only.The bug is weird, though. When I call
apropos
, I get this:
1 ]=> (apropos "mic") #[package 1 (user)] #[package 2 ()] ;Cold load finished ;Package: (user) 2 ]=>There are two odd things here. First is the repeat of the message that the cold load finished, second is the fact that the prompt is now at level 2.
I can't for the life of me imagine what might cause this. I'm guessing that I really screwed up the definition of a primitive and it is causing a recursive evaluation of something. I'm grasping at straws, though. In any case, this will be fun to debug because it involves weak pointers. The CLR has weak pointers, but now I have to really make them mimic the weak pointers that MIT Scheme expects.
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
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