> > Where were they in the earlier version of the OS? Can you go back into an old > system and find out? Alternatively, can you look for where they are supposed > to be (in older versions of the distro) by making searches over file trees? I decided to install GhostBSD and so far am happy with it. The only thing that's a little weird is it comes with clang 4.0. I'm not sure how it will be to get a more recent version of that installed. I'm sorry to say goodbye to TrueOS, but will certainly consider giving them another chance in the future. And it seems some critics would like you to think that I'm reinventing the wheel. Something like: C++ compilers are code generators. Why are you building a code generator? I'm not building another C++ compiler. I'm building an on-line code generator. My approach minimizes the amount of code you have to download/build/maintain. It makes it easier for you to work with multiple versions of the code generator. If you've ever used Compiler Explorer (https://godbolt.org), you may know how easy it is to use multiple compilers via their interface. If anyone would like a demo of the C++ Middleware Writer, please let me know. Brian Ebenezer Enterprises - Enjoying programming again. https://github.com/Ebenezer-group/onwards -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://mailman.mn-linux.org/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20180808/fb1cbcd1/attachment.html>