Okay, thanks for the responses. Some want this a lot, some not so much. For the benefit of those who care, I created a GoogleGroup for the purpose. It's called "Compilers", but the URL and email address had to use compilerSamples to avoid conflicts.
http://groups.google.com/group/compilerSamples There's a "files" section for holding stuff like the samples. There's a "discussion" section for ongoing talk. There's a "pages" section that works pretty much like a wiki. It should do pretty well for a start. ++ kevin On Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 6:26 AM, Willie Wong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Mon, Sep 01, 2008 at 10:01:13PM -0700, Penguin Lover Kevin O'Gorman > squawked: >> I was finally able to cobble together a working flex/bison parser from >> the bison-bridge example in an appendix to the flex info page. I'd >> like to share it, and perhaps other _working_ sample programs to the >> web at large. Does anyone know of a better venue for this than just >> some random page on my school's web server? I would like other people >> to be able to find this stuff and perhaps add to it or otherwise >> improve on it. >> > > Your school's web server is generally okay, IMHO. Tutorials from pages > used in a course at a school I often find to be trustworthy. (And > Google will find it!) > > Set up a Wiki somewhere if you want others to improve on it. (You can > even set it up to be a closed Wiki where you have to be an approved > user to edit; I've set up a Wiki for my school's local unix user > group, and have had members of the community at large e-mailing us > with suggestions for improvements on the content even though > editing of the Wiki is restricted. I think just having a Wiki gives > people the feeling that you are open to comments.) > > W > -- > W: I love this dorm... one of the only underclassmen dorm buildings with > a fully functional kitchen > S: mm, ET kitchen... > W: oh... go stick your head in an oven or something... why does MIT has to > be better then princeton in every hair of a detail > Sortir en Pantoufles: up 634 days, 11:59 > > -- Kevin O'Gorman, PhD