October 06, 2005
Man: "Doctor, when I do this it hurts"

Doctor: "Then - dont do that. That will be $75."

:D

zwang wrote:
> Call me paranoid, but the first thing I throw to LoCd is a zero-byte file. And Bang! Access violation. :)
October 06, 2005
>> Btw, how is any of you measuring LoC ? (with what tool I mean)
>>
>
> http://thomas.kuehne.cn/tools/locd.html
>
> Thomas

I think it's pretty common to not count lines containing only { or } as a LOC. From a few samples it looks like locd counts such lines.


October 06, 2005
"Ben Hinkle" <ben.hinkle@gmail.com> wrote in message news:di20ka$20ef$1@digitaldaemon.com...
> I think it's pretty common to not count lines containing only { or } as a LOC. From a few samples it looks like locd counts such lines.

If one wants to go down that path, I'd count # of statements + # of expression nodes + number of declarations.


October 06, 2005
JT schrieb:

> Man: "Doctor, when I do this it hurts"
> 
> Doctor: "Then - dont do that. That will be $75."
> 
> :D
> 
> zwang wrote:
> 
>> Call me paranoid, but the first thing I throw to LoCd is a zero-byte file. And Bang! Access violation. :)

;)

Fixed


October 06, 2005
 On Wed, 5 Oct 2005 13:46:22 +0300, Bruno Medeiros wrote:
> Btw, how is any of you measuring LoC ? (with what tool I mean)

 I just found another simple and quick measure. Zip the source up and look
at the compressed size. Anything < 750kB is small, < 1500kB medium
and beyond that large.

The compression ratio is also directly related to your COBOL constant, which defines how fast the bones in your fingertips will start showing due to excessive typing.

 -K

--
Kai Backman, programmer, kai@shorthike.com http://www.ShortHike.com - space station game


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