Lua

Lua is a programming language written in C that emphasizes performance. It has automatic memory management and is often used to extend software written in other languages.
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[zosy@localhost:~]% rpm -qa zenmap
zenmap-7.60-1.noarch
gnome doesn't use gksu instead of pkexec, so i made a patch.
su-to-zenmap-fix-gnome-root.patch.txt
add com.gnome.pkexec.zenmap.policy to /usr/share/polkit-1/actions should works fine.
[com.gnome.pkexec.zenmap.policy.txt](https://github.com/nmap/n
chore: wrong log
random stream test in [1, 10000]
-> stream/http subsystem, generate random value:
https://github.com/apache/apisix/blob/master/apisix/init.lua#L86
https://github.com/apache/apisix/blob/master/apisix/init.lua#L777
Currently, things like #3097 are caught accidentally when someone sees the breakage. Is it possible to automatically extract all links from the generated docs and catch broken links? Surely there are tools for that.
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There is already defined panic
macro in say.h header. There is also LuaJIT internal panic
routine on Lua global state. Their mix might lead to ridiculous preprocessor results: the LuaJIT panic
call (i.e. g->panic(L)
) is misexpanded and compilation fails with the corresponding error.
@Gerold103 proposed in [his revi
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Created by Roberto Ierusalimschy, Waldemar Celes, and Luiz Henrique de Figueiredo
Released 1993
- Organization
- lua
- Website
- www.lua.org
- Wikipedia
- Wikipedia
Actual behaviour
When simply trying to edit some additional files I often type
:e *.js
or something similar; this almost ALWAYS results inE77: Too many file names
.Expected behaviour
It's pretty clear what the user wants in this situation; they want to open the files as buffers! I'm sure there are legacy reasons for this error, but it's a pretty poor experience these days that