From nobody@digitalkingdom.org Wed Sep 14 16:39:33 2005 Received: with ECARTIS (v1.0.0; list lojban-beginners); Wed, 14 Sep 2005 16:39:33 -0700 (PDT) Received: from nobody by chain.digitalkingdom.org with local (Exim 4.52) id 1EFgqj-0008B7-3v for lojban-beginners-real@lojban.org; Wed, 14 Sep 2005 16:39:33 -0700 Received: from ms-smtp-01.texas.rr.com ([24.93.47.40] helo=ms-smtp-01-eri0.texas.rr.com) by chain.digitalkingdom.org with esmtp (Exim 4.52) id 1EFgqe-0008Ax-0H for lojban-beginners@chain.digitalkingdom.org; Wed, 14 Sep 2005 16:39:32 -0700 Received: from hypermetrics.com (cpe-66-68-164-156.austin.res.rr.com [66.68.164.156]) by ms-smtp-01-eri0.texas.rr.com (8.12.10/8.12.7) with ESMTP id j8ENdLH9003476 for ; Wed, 14 Sep 2005 18:39:22 -0500 (CDT) Message-ID: <4328B4A9.4030301@hypermetrics.com> Date: Wed, 14 Sep 2005 18:39:21 -0500 From: Hal Fulton User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.4.1) Gecko/20031114 X-Accept-Language: en-us, en MIME-Version: 1.0 To: lojban-beginners@chain.digitalkingdom.org Subject: [lojban-beginners] Re: Hi epkat... References: <4327B1F1.5090001@hypermetrics.com> <4328ABA5.8020806@hypermetrics.com> In-Reply-To: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Virus-Scanned: Symantec AntiVirus Scan Engine X-Spam-Score: -2.6 (--) X-archive-position: 2065 X-Approved-By: hal9000@hypermetrics.com X-ecartis-version: Ecartis v1.0.0 Sender: lojban-beginners-bounce@chain.digitalkingdom.org Errors-to: lojban-beginners-bounce@chain.digitalkingdom.org X-original-sender: hal9000@hypermetrics.com Precedence: bulk Reply-to: lojban-beginners@chain.digitalkingdom.org X-list: lojban-beginners Matt Arnold wrote: > I'm extremely encouraged to hear you're programming Lojban tools. That's > mainly what I wanted to discuss with you. Are you not able to talk about > features yet? Oh, I can talk. I just am always hesitant to talk about what I "plan" to do or "might" do, etc. Talk is cheap, as they say. ;) All I've got so far is code that parses cmavo.txt, gismu.txt, and noralujv.txt and produces lists (arrays and hashes) where words can be looked up and so on. I know those lists are old, but they were handy. If I do anything really serious, I will work with data from jbovlaste instead. Based on the little code I have, I did a little web templating (I didn't use Rails) and created a simple tool. It's not "officially" released yet, but why not let people look at it? http://hypermetrics.com/pikmin.html Cheers, Hal