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Date:      Thu, 23 Sep 2010 21:01:28 -0400
From:      Glen Barber <glen.j.barber@gmail.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: GUI Suggested?
Message-ID:  <4C9BF868.9000805@gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <20100924003120.GA19235@guilt.hydra>
References:  <3368057398-783131724@intranet.com.mx>	<20100923152023.GA14903@libertas.local.camdensoftware.com>	<AANLkTikECugKYAg%2Bt%2BQv%2BSGBgdfSg4kR1eAQO1Yffq8U@mail.gmail.com> <20100924003120.GA19235@guilt.hydra>

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On 9/23/10 8:31 PM, Chad Perrin wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 23, 2010 at 12:24:58PM -0500, Neal Hogan wrote:
>>
>> If you like xmonad, check out scrotwm. It's inspired by xmonad,
>> lightweight, written in C by oBSD dev, actively maintained, and
>> vim-like (among other things ;-).
> 
> Why is "written in C" considered such a great benefit by the Scrotwm
> developer(s)?  Earlier today, I read this on the site:
> 
>     "On the other hand xmonad has great defaults, key bindings and
>     xinerama support but is crippled by not being written in C."
> 
> What's up with that?  How does Haskell "cripple" xmonad?
> 

My interpretation is that if you will be compiling software for a
UNIX-like system, you will probably have some variant of a C compiler
already available.  Read as "just build it and go" versus "just build
its dependencies, then build it and go."

Cheers,

-- 
Glen Barber



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