From: "Drew Adams" <drew.adams@oracle.com>
To: "'Sven Bretfeld'" <sven.bretfeld@gmx.ch>
Cc: help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org
Subject: RE: wrong-type-argument listp \.\.\.
Date: Wed, 30 Jun 2010 06:16:20 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <AC1E40C8244A4E0E92FA835EE23BC419@us.oracle.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <87zkydvumu.fsf@rub.de>
> > And, as I suggested, check to see if some common data file
> > is used, which might be corrupted. If those programs all
> > share a common data file, that could be the culprit. This
> > smells of something like a corrupted desktop, session, or
> > save-history file.
>
> That was the problem. After I spend two hours narrowing down .emacs to
> zero, purging and reinstalling every Emacs related package, I just
> remembered your last suggestion and emptied ~/.emacs.d. Now,
> everything is working again.
Glad you found the problem. No need to reinstall packages. It's enough to
(temporarily) not reference (load) them.
It's about comparing two thingies over and over: one that works and one that
doesn't, and narrowing the difference until you find the problem. Instead of
starting with a full sack that manifests the problem, and chopping the contents
in half (and half...), you can start with an empty sack (emacs -Q) and add half
(and half...). Meme combat.
> Stupid me! Thank you very much for your help.
Nothing stupid about having such a problem or trying to guess what the cause is.
All too human.
That's why I replied - because we all go through this. It's a lesson we seem to
need to relearn over and over. Partly because, I think, we imagine that
everything was working so well together and there is so much of it and it is so
complex - we want to disturb that previously working set as little as possible.
We think, well, maybe it's just this little thing - or that one - or maybe that
one. We feel that searching systematically would be a bit brute and blind, and
we imagine that it could take a while.
Well, being systematic, brute, and blind is in fact its strong point! When you
haven't a clue, being systematic is smart (and grasping for straws is not). It
is only binary search that saves such an approach from being stupid -
systematic, but fast.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2010-06-30 13:16 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2010-06-29 21:57 wrong-type-argument listp \.\.\ Sven Bretfeld
2010-06-29 22:11 ` Drew Adams
2010-06-29 23:00 ` Sven Bretfeld
2010-06-29 23:43 ` Drew Adams
2010-06-30 7:37 ` Sven Bretfeld
2010-06-30 13:16 ` Drew Adams [this message]
2010-06-29 23:07 ` Sven Bretfeld
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