You’ll find that on the external diagram.
You’ll find that on the external diagram.
Introduces confusion how? Because it doesn’t agree with the arbitrary convention you happened to grow up with? Why is your preferred convention not equally objectively bad? I thought Americans were supposed to be the egotists.
I’d love to hear what’s objectively ‘wrong’ with this one. They’re arbitrary symbols. If anything, isn’t the decimal more akin to a full stop, while a digit separator is more of a pause?
RIP xtranormal
What reputable VPNs these days offer port forwarding? That’s a big part of what keeps me on a seedbox.
C is a little older than namespacing and object orientation. C++ wasn’t even a glimmer in Bjarne’s eye when these conventions were laid down.
And yes, having to google it is part of the design. Originally C programmers would have had to read actual manuals about this stuff. Once you learn the names you don’t really forget so it works well enough even now for ubiquitous standard library functions.
And yet, C was an ergonomic revelation to programmers of the time. Now it’s the arcane grandpa that most youngsters don’t put up with.
My sleuthing suggests I Saw the TV Glow (2024).
Plus having any rendering engine have a monopoly is terrible for the web long term.
Gentoo or Manjaro are to Arch? What do you mean? Those two are very different from each other especially in their relationships to Arch.
Eh, huel is like liquid clif bars. Sometimes you just want something quick and easy but reasonably nutritious.
Turns out massively parallel computation has applications beyond video rendering.
It doesn’t need to sound the same though, as long as the listener can spell ‘egg’.
That’s essentially it, but Gentoo has never required systemd.
That’s just one thing the editing language does, though. There’s no single feature you can point to as the smoking gun; it’s all the small advantages added together that make vi worthwhile.
Not just the next parenthesis that appears, It jumps to the matching one that opens or closes the one under the cursor. Hitting it repeatedly bounces back and forth around the text that pair of parentheses enclose.
It works not only with brackets and curly braces, but also with opening and closing tags in XML etc.
I feel like other editors must have an equivalent feature, though. I’d say the fact that vi can put such a specific action under just rather than some nasty chord or mouse operation is what really makes it shine here.
Nano is extremely basic, it’s not really the right comparison. Vi competes well with heavyweight GUI editors and IDEs, yet is available about as ubiquitously as nano.
By learning vi, I can have my no-compromises favorite editor equally available to me locally or remotely. The terse, low-chord (looking at you, nano) editing language in vi means I’m not even that hampered when I do remote editing from my phone.
Them titties are properly low-poly.
The Sun’s not going to explode, either. I’m beginning to think this dog is full of shit!
Water doesn’t go on the food pyramid, silly!
“Treat others how they wish to be treated, bearing in mind how you feel when you are mistreated” just doesn’t roll off the tongue in the same way.