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It’s not a dual-language platform, though. You write the backend and the frontend in Rust. The frontend code is compiled to WASM to serve it to the browser.
It’s not a dual-language platform, though. You write the backend and the frontend in Rust. The frontend code is compiled to WASM to serve it to the browser.
Fading out? With my wind band, we’ve never done it.
You can have everyone play pianissimo and also reduce how many players play each voice, but unlike a digital fade, this does change the way it sounds.
It’s also difficult to stay in tune when playing at a low volume with a wind instrument, so it starts to sound horrible before it becomes inaudible.
@Kairos@lemmy.today mentioned mic+soundboard, but for a windband, the band itself would need to be out of earshot, which is rarely possible.
So, yeah, if we ever need/want to cut a song short, we make use of a marching band signal.
Basically, the person on bass drum does two double-hits, which are out of rhythm so you can hear them, and then another hit on the first beat of the next measure, which is when everyone stops playing.
That does not always sound great either, but better than nosediving the whole orchestra. 🙃
Excuse me, Windows is the cheap copy of KDE.
I always hated that. It always felt like they just admitted defeat. They could have made an excellent song, but settled for disappointment.
Now I’m doing music myself, and goddamn, I get it. You can have a cool song going, and then you try to end it and it just sounds like disappointment every time.
Glasses with wrong strength should focus the incoming light wrongly and therefore effectively blur things.
If you can, I’d recommend trying out someone else’s glasses. It can give people headaches when their vision is blurry, because they’ll try to focus their eyes really hard.
Various ant species do a similar thing where their soldiers have really big, flat heads and when their nest gets attacked, the soldiers stick their head into the entrance way, so the attackers can’t come inside.
Apparently, this kind of behaviour is referred to as phragmosis.
Man, I hate the detours you’re supposed to take as a pedestrian or bicyclist, so that car drivers don’t get inconvenienced.
Interesting strategy after they already advertised their most recent game, Assassin’s Creed Mirage, as going back to the roots…
No worries, I wouldn’t know this, if I had not been in exactly the same situation, desperately trying to free up space by deleting packages and it just not working. Also, Snapper is easy to forget about, which is really a testament to how good it generally is.
I guess, at the end of the day, life is just a whole load of chemical reactions. Oxygen is popular for life on Earth, because it’s available pretty much everywhere and because it releases energy when combined with carbon, which we’ve also got a lot of.
Presumably, you could stick any two elements that have an exothermic reaction into a box, give them an energy source with enough activation energy (akin to Earth’s Sun), as well as a source of entropy and then, with enough time, life would find a way.
If you need to clear up space, you’ll want want to delete old snapshots that snapper took. There’s a good overview in YaST.
If you delete packages, they’ll still be part of the previous snapshot, so won’t actually free up space until all the snapshots in which this package was contained are (auto-)deleted.
The snapshots are incremental, so it’s when big changes happen between snapshots that they take up more space.
In Southern Germany, we have a food roughly like a baguette, called a “Seele”, which also happens to be the German word for “soul”.
So, in my headcanon, the guy ate a baguette and they split his stomach in half. 🙃
I actually even made my own bullshit-Spotify. As in, I’ve got a server running on a single-board computer which reads my music folder and serves a small music player as a webpage.
I didn’t want to install a music player client on my work laptop, but still wanted to listen to my own songs there.
Kann konfirmieren. Achso ne, Moment, kann ich nicht, bin ja Atheist.
I mean, I doubt the Windows support is particularly solid here either. Using shell commands to formulate tasks will never be great for Windows, because the shell ecosystem is simply Linux.
Your comment is perhaps a bit confusing without a link: https://just.systems/man/en/
There’s not exactly a dichotomy there…
“We live in a society.”
We’ve been using Leptos at work, which is a similar framework (and probably shares half the stack with Dioxus).
And yeah, it’s really good. My favorite thing about using Rust for the UI is algebraic data types.
So, in Rust when you call a function which can fail, there isn’t an exception being thrown, but rather you get a
Result
-type as return value.This
Result
can either contain anOk
with the actual return value inside. Or it can contain anErr
with an error message inside.So, in your UI code, you just hand this
Result
all the way to your display code and there you either display the value or you display the error.No more uninitialized variables, no more separate booleans to indicate that the variable is uninitialized, no more unreadable multi-line ternaries.
It just becomes so much simpler to load something from the backend and display it, which is kind of important in frontend code.