They killed i.reddit.com after the APIcalypse, so I wouldn’t be so sure.
They killed i.reddit.com after the APIcalypse, so I wouldn’t be so sure.
I bought an HP* color laser before Covid too. It’s starting to bitch about cyan, but holy hell I abused the shit out of it during my studies and it’s still good as new.
*I know, but their enterprise grade stuff is actually decent.
Anything that isn’t Steam works like shit on Linux (mileage may vary, but that’s my experience). I find it hilarious and sad that I can get a better experience by pirating it and launch through Lutris.
Denial of Playing attack.
So MariaDB will explode halfway to Japan?
They actually tried using a West German state of the art police robot but it failed. IIRC it still sits broken on the roof to this day.
Awful Awful Awful Awful
Well obviously with the block chain, duh.
Nice. Now make a TV that doesn’t need updates. Hint: Drop the internet connection.
It lines up for me on Jerboa
Can confirm, it looked better as a pitch black blob.
Denmark is at 87%, nice. Let’s make it reach 100%!
And a 5th: Advertising.
This will level the playing field a lot since Google wouldn’t be able to subsidise their browser with ad money in order to show more ads in their search engine as well as feed their ads with data from the use of all their products.
Not really. It is just translating the Windows system API calls into Linux system API calls. It’s not emulating Windows, it’s an entirely different implementation that doesn’t necessarily match that of Microsoft’s implementation. It had it own workarounds to make buggy code work.
You wouldn’t call a Java Virtual Machine an emulator of another JVM either, they’re just different implementations of the same specification.
I’m currently looking at onedev.io for personal and startup use but since I haven’t had an opportunity to test it out yet I can’t vouch for it. It looks cool though and seems to have a good rep.
Funny, the forced indentation is what I hate about Python. If you think a missing semicolon can be hard to catch, don’t ever think about a missing whitespace :p
The end
keyword really isn’t a big deal for me. I find it to be a good way to easily spot the end of a method. But if you wouldn’t like it I’d still find it a good compromise to avoid syntax issues due to whitespace.
Can’t your read? It’s not a flamethrower!
I think you’ll like Ruby. It has mostly done away with braces and code blocks end with end
, e.g.
def create
unless admin redirect_to new_session_path and return
@product = Product.new product_params
if @product.save
flash[:success] = "New product has been created!"
redirect_to edit_product_path(@product) and return
else
flash[:error] = "Something went wrong!
render :new
end
end
This is working code that I simplified a bit from an old project of mine.
Why is Microsoft defending Crowdstrike?
While I am not fond of AI, we do have access to it at work and I must admit that it saves some time in some cases. I’m not a developer with decades of experience in a single language, so something I am using AI to is asking “Is it possible to do a one-liner in language X where it does Y?” It works very well and the code is rarely unusable, but it is still up to my judgement whether the AI came up with a clever use of functions that I didn’t know about or whether it crammed stuff into a single unreadable line.