Subj : Re: Latest sources.. To : Nicholas Boel From : Vitaliy Aksyonov Date : Tue Feb 20 2024 07:04 am Hello Nicholas. 19 Feb 24 17:54, you wrote to me: VA>> Then most probably it has 'soft CR'. You may dump message hex VA>> codes with 'I'. NB> I assume I'm looking for 8D somewhere? If so, there are none in the NB> entire message. Yep. Looks like that message doesn't have soft CRs. NB> I did notice a question mark in the message body: NB> 00B0 C4 C4 C4 C4 C4 BF 20 C4 C4 C4 C4 C4 C4 C4 C4 C4 ? NB> But that's about it as far as anomolies. Code 20 is a space. So wrapping caused by that. Also check if you have DispMargin parameter in your config. If you do - comment it out or remove. Then GoldEd will use all window width. VA>> If you just want to use specific commit, then use git checkout. VA>> If you want to do binary search for broken commit - use git VA>> bisect interactively. Here's a tutorial, how to use it: NB> I used checkout to get the specific commit you asked me to grab NB> (372220588c6f17cd3f709dcb721a9144169d988c), and it is indeed exactly NB> how the latest version is. So you were right. You said that before you started to experiment - all worked fine. Have you used same compiler? Now I suspect that issue caused by something in your setup. Because it's quite opposite from others have. VA>> And that's is very strange. I'd not be surprised if it was broken VA>> when I made first change (which was reverted by last commit), but VA>> looks like it worked fine. NB> It did not. Whatever first change you made actually kind of helped me, NB> I suppose. Hopefully this helps narrow things down better and we can NB> figure out what's going on. That's why would be interesting to use bisect from 372220588c6f17cd3f709dcb721a9144169d988c to master and find specific commit which made it bad in your specific case. Vitaliy --- GoldED+/LNX 1.1.5-b20231030 * Origin: Aurora, Colorado (1:104/117) .