Code Cleanup Culls LibreOffice Cruft 317
mikejuk writes with an interesting look at what coders can get around to after a few years of creating a free office suite: dealing with many thousands of lines of deprecated code: "Thanks to the efforts of its volunteer taskforce, over half the unused code in LibreOffice has been removed over the past six months. It's good to see this clean-up operation but it does raise questions about the amount of dead code lurking out there in the wild. The scale of the dead code in LibreOffice is shocking, and it probably isn't because the code base is especially bad. Can you imagine this in any other engineering discipline? Oh yes, we built the bridge but there are a few hundred unnecessary iron girders that we forgot to remove... Oh yes, we implemented the new chip but that area over there is just a few thousand transistors we no longer use... and so on." Well, that last one doesn't sound too surprising at all. Exciting to think that LibreOffice (which has worked well for me over the past several years, including under the OpenOffice.org name) has quite so much room for improvement.
Re:I'd bet there is. (Score:5, Funny)
Now if only they'd take over the Java project.
Re:Not at all. I've had a house built. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Worked Well? (Score:5, Funny)
Of course, that behavior is quite similar to what happens when you open the moderately complex docx document in Word.
Re:Not at all. I've had a house built. (Score:5, Funny)
If you have newspaper or other similar material in your walls, which wasn't processed and designed as insulting filler
What material in your walls could be more insulting than newspaper?
Re:Not at all. I've had a house built. (Score:5, Funny)
Well, there are a variety of fiber, composite and other materials with higher R-factors per volume, but that's beside the point.
Newspaper as in processed recycled newspaper bought as insulation from Home Depot or the equivalent is one thing. Stuffing newspapers into your wall after receiving them in the post and reading them (a common practice) is quite another. The latter retains moisture and can lead to mold, rotting and structural damage, just to start with the most obvious problems.
Re:It doesn't matter (Score:5, Funny)
Slashdot, home of the Linux Cocksucker Boy Toys.
Can you, please, post us a link to the Linux Cocksucker Boy Toys source code.
Re:Not at all. I've had a house built. (Score:4, Funny)
What material in your walls could be more insulting than newspaper?
An immured scientologist proselytizer that once came to your house to annoy you, only to never leave your house alive again?