@Machavity While I do think the experiment has been a smashing success, I think we should probably set the permanent change to 4 CVs
I think that's a happy medium between preventing a permanent rise in false positive closures and still making it significantly easier to close questions
@StephenKennedy already saw it. The answer of @rene was exactly the reasoning for suggesting the close. While bash is a programming language, the question itself is nothing more than a misconfiguration of some basic configuration files. This has nothing to do with programming.
@Adriaan There should not be any organized voting on the question. There definitely shouldn't be another request here. While everyone is free to vote as they see fit, once it's on Meta, we let it be handled by Meta.
@kvantour please be informed I know close to nothing about bash and all that Linux stuff. Feel free to make an edit if I put anything there that is wrong or needs better jargon to hide that I'm a simple Windows user ....
I went though all of them and those two are the flag-worthy ones. They had a OSR Q that was just deleted by 20k. The others are either benign or relevant
@AnttiHaapala congratulations for this 140+ vote answer stackoverflow.com/a/57651888/6451573 of yours (which was also flagged as NAA what the hell...). Do you want to make it community wiki ? :)
@AnttiHaapala get the rep and run 😀 And I finally had the time to carefully read the question & answers and this is a high-quality and completely on-topic thread. If someone closes it again, just flag!
now reopened by 3 other people 😀 this 3-close/reopen thingy is going to create more wars.
@Zoe sorry, deleted your post by mistake. Cannot undelete it...
@AnttiHaapala I should reply: they should have coded that directly in assembly as it's compiler dependent & architecture dependent, it would have been even faster. No need to feed code to the compiler just to make the compiler generate the asm code we know it should generate...
okay I'm a 68000 freak and everytime I try to do something in C on my amiga it crawls. So I have to use asm everytime. But now limited register numbers, lack of calling conventions, wrong sizes in operations, wrong addressing modes, unpreserved/corrupt registers, writing fully relocatable code by hand, undebuggable code are sucking the lifeforce out of me
Also when using a legacy computer & relatively new compilers you think you're going to be able to successfully port Linux/Windows programs, using SDL and all, but those are bloated for old machines.
So back to asm & specific retro programming. No miracles.
Specially because those geniuses implemented 256 color video modes with bitplanes so we have to convert chunky pixels to bitplanes: that eats most of the CPU.
If only they included chunky video mode... Historically the machine (A500) only had 32 colors (5 bitplanes). But WTF 256 colors without 1-byte-per-pixel (A1200) is just a crime. Say goodbye to fast 3D graphics too.
There is a dedicated GPU which blits bitplanes. But if you don't use it (ex: in most ports like DOOM, MAME, SDL-based ...), you're back to writing bits to each bitplane with the CPU... sob. there's a contest on which is the fastest "chunky2planar" asm routine. Reminds me of the strlen question... :)
actually, if you write the game for the machine specifically, that's what you do and it's fast/smooth. But when you directly port SDL stuff, it crawls. An emulator renders pixel-by-pixel, it's not aware of objects as a whole. Yes there are specific emulators that intercept emulated console GPU writes to convert them to the host GPU writes but not on MAME. I think the Nintendo DS versions of SNES & Sega Genesis emulators do this, as both are super fast. But Nintendo DS also has chunky gfx.