)]}'
{
  "commit": "5da93b00b3e804723ac8a765b274c6e22df85fca",
  "tree": "6464145b4fcbeab9b528d786aa299a83dbf7e96f",
  "parents": [
    "7121d368274c3a797b2b0f0bf7516acf6c33081a"
  ],
  "author": {
    "name": "Tom de Vries",
    "email": "tdevries@suse.de",
    "time": "Mon Feb 02 19:22:51 2026 +0100"
  },
  "committer": {
    "name": "Tom de Vries",
    "email": "tdevries@suse.de",
    "time": "Mon Feb 02 19:22:51 2026 +0100"
  },
  "message": "[gdb/testsuite] Fix pi approximation\n\nIn gdb.dap/ada-non-ascii/prog.adb, I came across the following:\n...\n   π : Integer :\u003d 3;            --  The Indiana Approximation.\n...\n\nThis article [1] explains the background behind the comment: the Indiana pi\nbill.\n\nGiven that the common interpretation seems to be that the bill implies that\nπ \u003d\u003d 3.2 [2]:\n...\nThe bill ... has been claimed to imply a number of different values for π,\nalthough the closest it comes to explicitly asserting one is the wording \"the\nratio of the diameter and circumference is as five-fourths to four\", which\nwould make π \u003d 16⁄5 \u003d 3.2, ... .\n...\nchange the type to float, and set it to 3.2.\n\nLuckily, in this particular case, changing the approximation of π has no\neffect, so the test-case still passes :) .\n\nTested on x86_64-linux.\n\nApproved-by: Kevin Buettner \u003ckevinb@redhat.com\u003e\n\n[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indiana_pi_bill\n[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Approximations_of_pi#Indiana_bill\n",
  "tree_diff": [
    {
      "type": "modify",
      "old_id": "7853be5eff8b110cfbba21b3319529639babc4ec",
      "old_mode": 33188,
      "old_path": "gdb/testsuite/gdb.dap/ada-non-ascii/prog.adb",
      "new_id": "b2885b3759e9bd7636bf3316f072452ed9b5adc1",
      "new_mode": 33188,
      "new_path": "gdb/testsuite/gdb.dap/ada-non-ascii/prog.adb"
    }
  ]
}
