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Guinn Wizard
Joined: 03 Mar 2001 Posts: 1127 Location: London
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_________________ CMUD Pro, Windows Vista x64
Core2 Q6600, 4GB RAM, GeForce 8800GT
Because you need it for text... ;)
Last edited by Guinn on Tue Aug 28, 2007 6:21 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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sabman Novice
Joined: 17 Aug 2007 Posts: 34
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Posted: Mon Aug 27, 2007 6:22 pm |
In preferences, the ~ is used as a quote character.
If you go under preferences and uncheck the box next to ~ in Scripting->Special Characters it displays perfectly. |
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Guinn Wizard
Joined: 03 Mar 2001 Posts: 1127 Location: London
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Posted: Mon Aug 27, 2007 6:39 pm |
That's not what I'm getting at. It's inserting an extra space
"test~1" should show "test1" but instead it's showing "test 1" |
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_________________ CMUD Pro, Windows Vista x64
Core2 Q6600, 4GB RAM, GeForce 8800GT
Because you need it for text... ;) |
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sabman Novice
Joined: 17 Aug 2007 Posts: 34
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Posted: Mon Aug 27, 2007 6:40 pm |
Oh. When I did it, it showed test1 =/ . That's why I said that.
I can test again later. |
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Guinn Wizard
Joined: 03 Mar 2001 Posts: 1127 Location: London
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Posted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 6:22 pm |
Just a bump because Zugg's responded to most other bugs and this has dropped a way down
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_________________ CMUD Pro, Windows Vista x64
Core2 Q6600, 4GB RAM, GeForce 8800GT
Because you need it for text... ;) |
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sabman Novice
Joined: 17 Aug 2007 Posts: 34
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Posted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 6:24 pm |
I can't get it to happen on my side.
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Tech GURU
Joined: 18 Oct 2000 Posts: 2733 Location: Atlanta, USA
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Posted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 6:57 pm |
This is a strange one, I got it to happen for me once. The first time I did I got the space as Guinn described, then I tried "test~l" without the quotes and it displayed as expected. The I tried it with a few single digit numbers and the displayed as expected. Finally I tried "test~1" again it displayed properly.
I also tried it with another session I already had open, it displayed properly there as well.
I closed all my CMUD instances, started it again and tried it from a blank session. the first time I do it I get the space as Guinn describes, after that it works as expected.
Really weird. |
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_________________ Asati di tempari! |
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Fang Xianfu GURU
Joined: 26 Jan 2004 Posts: 5155 Location: United Kingdom
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Posted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 7:14 pm |
I'm also seeing this bug only in the first command that's entered.
1) Open CMUD
2) Close the Sessions dialogue with the X
3) Enter "test~1" on the command line - "test 1" is displayed
4) Press enter again - "test1" is displayed. |
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DanteX Apprentice
Joined: 13 Aug 2007 Posts: 166
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Posted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 9:13 pm |
Wierd, when I do "#SHOW test~1", it shows "test1", just like it should.
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Guinn Wizard
Joined: 03 Mar 2001 Posts: 1127 Location: London
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Posted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 9:24 pm |
So do I win 'weirdest bug of 2.01' award? :)
I was actually trying first to write
blah#
and getting a parsing error, so that's why I did blah~#
and it put the space in.
Might be a second bug with the blah# where the smart command line could be smarter to realise that there's no command required when # is by itself or at the end of a word? |
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_________________ CMUD Pro, Windows Vista x64
Core2 Q6600, 4GB RAM, GeForce 8800GT
Because you need it for text... ;) |
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Zugg MASTER
Joined: 25 Sep 2000 Posts: 23379 Location: Colorado, USA
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Posted: Wed Aug 29, 2007 8:17 pm |
OK, that is pretty weird! I have reproduced it, but I have no idea what is causing it. Each time you enter something on the command line, it gets executed in a new thread.
Well, actually, I guess CMUD *does* reuse threads from it's "pool", so maybe something isn't getting initialized the first time a thread is used.
Added to bug list. |
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