Em Wed, 24 Apr 2019 16:54:10 +0200 Borislav Petkov <bp@xxxxxxxxx> escreveu: > On Wed, Apr 24, 2019 at 07:40:07AM -0300, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote: > > Personally, I don't care much with monospaced fonts on this table. After > > all, if I want to see it monospaced, I can simply click at the > > "View page source" at the browser, and it will display the file as a > > plain old monospaced text file. > > Goes to show why kernel people wouldn't want to look at that in > the browser. Long hex numbers are hard to read as it is - that's > why there's even the 4-digit separator in some docs, for example: > 0xffff_ffff_8100_0000. IMHO, even the 0x and _ would make it harder to read. This is a way more easy for my eyes: ffff ffff 8100 0000 > Not having it monospaced makes the whole thing even less readable. Yeah, I see your point and agree with it. Just saying that, if all I want is to check if addresses that start with ffff80 belongs to the guard hole, or just to copy a value from a table into some C code, the font doesn't matter much, and, if I care, a simple click would show it in monospaced fonts. Looking from your PoV, something like: |ffffffff80000000 | -2 GB | ffffffff9fffffff | 512 MB | kernel text mapping, mapped to physical address 0 | is very hard to be parsed by a human eye, even with monospaced fonts. In order to make it easier, I would replace it by: |ffff ffff 8000 0000 | -2 GB | ffff ffff 9fff ffff | 512 MB | kernel text mapping, mapped to physical address 0 | > > That's why it is important for the markup not to get in the way of > people looking at those files in an editor. Fully agreed. the markups should make things easier and not harder for people to read its contents. Thanks, Mauro _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel