* Re: [9fans] spaces in filenames @ 2002-06-01 13:46 Russ Cox 2002-06-01 14:34 ` [9fans] lures Michael Baldwin 0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread From: Russ Cox @ 2002-06-01 13:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans looks like you pulled in a big one, geoff. where do you get such great lures? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* [9fans] lures 2002-06-01 13:46 [9fans] spaces in filenames Russ Cox @ 2002-06-01 14:34 ` Michael Baldwin 2002-06-01 14:59 ` Lucio De Re 0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread From: Michael Baldwin @ 2002-06-01 14:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans yeah, that's what i like about geoff. if you can't have animated discussions of such fringe stuff as cursor keys vs. mouse or spaces in filenames on 9fans, then it would be a duller world. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] lures 2002-06-01 14:34 ` [9fans] lures Michael Baldwin @ 2002-06-01 14:59 ` Lucio De Re 2002-06-01 17:54 ` [9fans] spaces, separators, and utf-8 Michael Baldwin 2002-06-01 18:01 ` [9fans] long path names Michael Baldwin 0 siblings, 2 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Lucio De Re @ 2002-06-01 14:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans On Sat, Jun 01, 2002 at 10:34:13AM -0400, Michael Baldwin wrote: > > yeah, that's what i like about geoff. if you can't have animated > discussions of such fringe stuff as cursor keys vs. mouse or spaces in > filenames on 9fans, then it would be a duller world. The clincher is that the space is useful both as a separator of command line arguments and as a joiner of filename "words". Seeing as even Micahel Baldwin does not suggest using spaces as path separators (why not?) I would be tempted to go along with the school of thought that proposes using a teeny dot in filenames. The rationale being that long filenames, GUIs and Internationalisation are all the _new_ rage and may as well be lumped into a single paradigm change. That we should need a keyboard key for the new pseudospace (it was very useful in Wang Word Processors, others may remember it from MultiMate days) in as convenient a position as the present space bar, well, that is a little harder to address. Also, I think it was dhog suggesting proportional spacing fonts in program source (I shudder!) but in my mind a diminutive dot would look nice as a linking space in the proportional space representation of a long file name. Finally, the space as a command line argument separator could be sacrificed, but the result would not be aesthetically pleasing, in my opinion. And the diminutive dot would look wrong in this context, specially if using a proportional font. To give Michael his due, spaces in filenames can no longer be suppressed. But if they become very common, it will become more convenient to use a GUI than command line composition. That will be a sad day. ++L PS: It's tempting to dig up the arguments in favour of Oberon's flat filespace, I wonder how it would be received by the proponents of a namespace _based_ on file paths :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* [9fans] spaces, separators, and utf-8 2002-06-01 14:59 ` Lucio De Re @ 2002-06-01 17:54 ` Michael Baldwin 2002-06-01 18:21 ` Scott Schwartz 2002-06-01 22:00 ` Dan Cross 2002-06-01 18:01 ` [9fans] long path names Michael Baldwin 1 sibling, 2 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Michael Baldwin @ 2002-06-01 17:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans On Saturday, June 1, 2002, at 10:59 , lucio@proxima.alt.za wrote: > The clincher is that the space is useful both as a separator of > command line arguments and as a joiner of filename "words". command line arguments can be trivially quoted. if the issue is possible shell misinterpretation, then we've got a whole slew of allowed chars that are "problems": * ? ; < > [ ] { } ` ' " $ & ^ # = \ |. they are all allowed now, and if i type them at a shell, i've got to quote them. one shell (mash) used : as a special char, and there were and are files with colons in them in the plan 9 distribution. so why does space get all the scorn? > Seeing as even Michael Baldwin does not suggest using spaces as path > separators (why not?) ["even Michael Baldwin" -- are you saying i now have a reputation as a communist?!] we already have a separator (/), no need for another one. or are you asking why not space instead? when i call a file "My Great Novel" it doesn't seem natural to think of space as a path separator. i used Primos eons ago, and they used ">", which is perhaps arguably slightly more intuitive than "/" (or ":" or "\"). i can imagine wanting to put a date in a filename as in 2002/06/01 or use / in other ways in names, but > is harder to imagine. but in the end, you must have a separator, so you just pick a char and say it's the separator. it is /. and you cannot use / otherwise in a path. fine, that's life. and 9P even works when accessing something that doesn't use / because the protocol itself doesn't use / in Twalk. so one can even get to those ugly \ systems from plan 9 (until they do something stupid like put / in a path element). but space as a path separator? yikes, no. but speaking to digy's point, i'm glad that control chars are disallowed. i think it is useful to have a char or two that you know are outside the possible charset for filenames. i'm thinking of \t and \n, which can easily be used in text programs to delimit paths if they don't feel like quoting. and NUL, well let's not get started. does NUL work *anywhere*? can't use it in C strings, can't use it in acme or rio or sam, can't use it in old 9P. curiously enough, 9P2000 can actually transport it. but just say no to NUL. > The rationale being that long filenames, GUIs and Internationalisation > are all the _new_ rage and may as well be lumped into a single > paradigm change. hmm, i thought that internationalization by using utf-8 everywhere (including in pathnames) was pioneered by plan 9 itself. and it is a good idea. mac os x uses utf-8 paths and does ok with utf-8 in terminal windows and mail; what about the other unixoid systems? but are there any systems that handle utf-8 as cleanly as plan 9 yet? i don't know of any. the mac has problems (do ls in a Terminal window, or use TextEdit or [gasp] vi or emacs), and if there is a convenient input method, i haven't found it. now it would be a great thing if this attribute of plan 9 (utf-8 everywhere and it just works, decent C language support, and a goodly-sized unicode font) were put into the commercial OS's out there. hey geoff, can you pull that off at apple? certainly you wouldn't be opposed to *that* crusade?! ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] spaces, separators, and utf-8 2002-06-01 17:54 ` [9fans] spaces, separators, and utf-8 Michael Baldwin @ 2002-06-01 18:21 ` Scott Schwartz 2002-06-01 22:00 ` Dan Cross 1 sibling, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2002-06-01 18:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans | ... and 9P even works when accessing something | that doesn't use / because the protocol itself doesn't use / in Twalk. | so one can even get to those ugly \ systems from plan 9 (until they do | something stupid like put / in a path element). If open took an array of filenames, you wouldn't need a delimiter in the kernel. On the other hand, if there were system calls that gave more direct access to 9p, you could do it that way. An old thread also argued for that on the grounds of making stacked file servers easier to build. | don't feel like quoting. and NUL, well let's not get started. does NUL | work *anywhere*? It is said to work in TCL, where they use a (technically illegal) utf sequence that translates to 0x0000. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] spaces, separators, and utf-8 2002-06-01 17:54 ` [9fans] spaces, separators, and utf-8 Michael Baldwin 2002-06-01 18:21 ` Scott Schwartz @ 2002-06-01 22:00 ` Dan Cross 1 sibling, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Dan Cross @ 2002-06-01 22:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > ["even Michael Baldwin" -- are you saying i now have a reputation as a > communist?!] Yes. - Dan C. :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* [9fans] long path names 2002-06-01 14:59 ` Lucio De Re 2002-06-01 17:54 ` [9fans] spaces, separators, and utf-8 Michael Baldwin @ 2002-06-01 18:01 ` Michael Baldwin 1 sibling, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Michael Baldwin @ 2002-06-01 18:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans now that long names are really supported in plan 9, when is the archive format going to be fixed? it still uses the 16-char limit from the ancient days, which even 3rd edition plan 9 could choke on (16 < 28). other systems out there use one of i think 3 different hacks to extend the name limit (ugh). ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2002-06-01 22:00 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 7+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2002-06-01 13:46 [9fans] spaces in filenames Russ Cox 2002-06-01 14:34 ` [9fans] lures Michael Baldwin 2002-06-01 14:59 ` Lucio De Re 2002-06-01 17:54 ` [9fans] spaces, separators, and utf-8 Michael Baldwin 2002-06-01 18:21 ` Scott Schwartz 2002-06-01 22:00 ` Dan Cross 2002-06-01 18:01 ` [9fans] long path names Michael Baldwin
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