Creating printed source code listings

Albert Hopkins ahopkins at dynacare.com
Mon Oct 30 12:00:32 EST 2000


Sounds great!  Let me know when you'll have this finished.

--albert

On Wed, 25 Oct 2000 13:14:41 GMT, jaepstein_63 at yahoo.com <jaepstein_63 at yahoo.com> wrote:
>Hi,
>
>This may be slightly off-topic, but here goes.  While traversing source
>code online using Speedbar, etags, etc. is all very nice, sometimes what
>I really need is to print out a lot of code in a nice organized manner.
>In particular, it would be nice to have:
>  (a) two page numbers: one local for each file, and the other global
>for the entire comprehensive listing
>  (b) an index showing on which page(s) I can find references to a
>particular symbol.  Distinguishing between a function definition and
>non-defining references would also be nice.
>
>At this point, I am mostly interested in such a tool for Python code,
>but would like it in the future for Perl, C, Java, Matlab, and Elisp.
>
>I would prefer to be able to control this somehow through NT Emacs, but
>both Unix-based solutions and non-Emacs-friendly solutions could also be
>OK.
>
>Thanks for any pointers,
>
>-Jonathan
>
>
>Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
>Before you buy.


-- 
                                                     Albert Hopkins
                                             Sr. Systems Specialist
                                              Dynacare Laboratories 
                                              ahopkins at dynacare.com

Never trust a man who praises compassion while pointing a gun at you. 
-Eric S. Raymond 



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