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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: the importance of keeping notes
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: Re: the importance of keeping notes
- From: turnbull@example.com (Stephen J. Turnbull)
- Date: Tue, 1 Oct 96 10:21 JST
- In-reply-to: <Pine.LNX.3.91.960930120748.154B-100000@example.com> (message from Dennis McMurchy on Mon, 30 Sep 1996 12:39:45 +0900 (GMT+0900))
- Reply-To: tlug@example.com
- Sender: owner-tlug
>>>>> "Dennis" == Dennis McMurchy <denismcm@example.com> writes: Dennis> I have at least twenty volumes of Unix books at hand, and Dennis> they are a wonderful resource, but they are _no_ Dennis> replacement for careful notes on what you've actually done Dennis> and problems you've actually solved. Dennis> My ~/systemnotes/ directory after a year running Linux on Dennis> Intel contains almost a hundred files totalling over 200K Dennis> (that's a lot of text). Ever think of writing a book yourself? :-) Too much work, I'm sure, but there would probably be a small market for it. On this theme, I suspect that one reason Dennis's notes save him again and again is because he always knows where to grep first for hints, and (since he wrote the notes himself) the keywords are natural. I haven't done anything about it yet, but the agrep (aka glimpse) package looks very interesting. Because it preprocesses the whole file system (if you want it to) you can find all references in your file system in less time than it takes to "apropos <keyword>". Applications I'm thinking about include preprocessing all my Linux-related CDs---since the databases live in files you can keep them online even when the CD is offline. Even with DVD or the following generation, you'll change media often for new applications. Or upgrade to new distributions with "upgraded" docs (that no longer contain your keyword). Or whatever. This solves the "where" problem: search everywhere, including offline. It doesn't solve the "unnatural keywords" problem completely (nothing can---did you read the article on 'whatis' and 'apropos' in LJ and notice how a keyword that appeared for one relevant man page didn't appear in lots of others?), but you're far more likely to get hits with the agrep database than with the apropos database. That leads to an overflow problem, but that's better than underflow. I don't know how agrep works on nihongo.... Steve -- Stephen John Turnbull University of Tsukuba Yaseppochi-Gumi Institute of Policy and Planning Sciences http://turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp/ Tennodai 1-1-1, Tsukuba, 305 JAPAN turnbull@example.com ----------------------------------------------------------------- a word from the sponsor will appear below ----------------------------------------------------------------- The TLUG mailing list is proudly sponsored by TWICS - Japan's First Public-Access Internet System. Now offering 20,000 yen/year flat rate Internet access with no time charges. Full line of corporate Internet and intranet products are available. info@example.com Tel: 03-3351-5977 Fax: 03-3353-6096
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