Personally, I don't think that an average user, who use it to edit text or scripts, will start the gdb (GNU Debugger) and examine the disassembled code to check why is it crashed. (Unfortunately I also could not do it because gdb was not installed to my computer).
Friday, August 31, 2007
Emacs abort dialog
Emacs is a popular text editor, but it can crash:

Personally, I don't think that an average user, who use it to edit text or scripts, will start the gdb (GNU Debugger) and examine the disassembled code to check why is it crashed. (Unfortunately I also could not do it because gdb was not installed to my computer).
Personally, I don't think that an average user, who use it to edit text or scripts, will start the gdb (GNU Debugger) and examine the disassembled code to check why is it crashed. (Unfortunately I also could not do it because gdb was not installed to my computer).
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