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Showing posts with the label Xchat

XChat Guile 0.3

Changes in this release: - Move/port to Guile-1.8. - Get rid of all locking and thread stuff and in turn dep on gthread. - Guile console. [Lionel Elie Mamane] - Use alist instead of list where appropriate. - Use XCHAT_EAT_* instead of hardcoded 0/1. [Lionel Elie Mamane] - Fix memory leak in xchat_write. [Lionel Elie Mamane] - We maintain this NEWS file from now on. :) - Some other minor fixes. Download release tarball from here: http://static.fi/~zeenix/xchat-guile/xchat-guile-0.3.tar.gz What is it? =========== XChat-Guile is a plugin for XChat that enables XChat plugin writers to write their plugins in Scheme language. Requirements: ============= * XChat >= 2.4.1 * Guile >= 1.6.4 API Documentation: http://static.fi/~zeenix/xchat-guile/xchat-guile.txt

XChat or irssi+screen+ssh?

Ever since I started to IRC from my Linux machine, not only I had been a happy (almost) user of XChat for years but also I wrote an XChat plugin for Guile. All that changed when I moved to Finland three years ago and was educated about the benefits of the combination of irssi + screen +ssh, the biggest (perhaps the only one) of them being the persistence connection to IRC. Since then I had been using that combination. After three years, I am having doubts about the choice I made at that time. XChat might not be able to provide me with a persistent connection to the IRC world but it still provides lots of small features that irssi does not (and in some cases can not) provide that really does matter in the end and one would expect in a modern IRC client, e.g hard-to-miss notifications when I get new messages, saving of logs and DCC-sent-files directly on my local-machine etc. I switched to back to XChat a few days ago. I mostly feel good about coming back to it but still miss the persi