Edward,
I guess there's two things at play here. For starters, Ge Wang has a
tendency to over-play the "disastrous crashes" of which Chuck is
capable. He *is* being facetious. Chuck has not damaged anyone's
computer, or ruined anyone's data to my knowledge. There is, however,
as with all software released under the GNU Public License, no
"guarantee" and downloading and running the software is technically
"at your own risk," although I for one have never had any problems
with Chuck or any GNU Public Licensed software that I would label
"disastrous."
The worst Chuck has done for me is crashing it's own process and
forcing me to restart it. It often does this when it should actually
spit out some error message. It is also a tad more memory and CPU
hungry than its developers would like it to be when it is "mature." I
think that's what the real message is here.
Be not afraid. Chuck is good news.
Mike
On Sun, Aug 1, 2010 at 11:17 AM, Edward Herbst
Can someone please advise if someone is being facetious or is there really a risk in the download? When you click the Download link the first paragraph reads:
"ChucK-1.2.x.x is part of the Dracula release of ChucK - why Dracula? While the previous release (Frankenstein/1.1.x.x) offered the proof of concepts (timing, concurrency, on-the-fly programming) with a generous propensity to explode, the Dracula release is more refined and powerful with the addition of arrays, objects, events (and better explosions too). Additionally, the Dracula release is yet unoptimized and may suck all blood and life from your computer (anticipate spectacular crashes and other bloody disasters)... Please let us know if that happens. " - Show quoted text - _______________________________________________ chuck-users mailing list chuck-users@lists.cs.princeton.edu https://lists.cs.princeton.edu/mailman/listinfo/chuck-users