Mom, put down the phone, I’m using the modem!
coder
Mom, put down the phone, I’m using the modem!
I don’t use Ruby anymore, but I still use irb
everyday as a command line calculator.
Tradition is just dead people’s baggage. Doug Stanhope.
I’m not great with gdb but I think using the x cmd shows them.
Your result is correct, is just not displaying the leading zeros.
It was definitely DDJ… back in the early 90s, right? I once asked Walter Bright (creator of D) if they were related and he told me it was just a naming coincidence.
♪I went to school and I got OpenD♪
Known to cause heisenbugs. They’re bugs that disappear when you try to measure them with a debugger or a printf.
I prefer using the command line… but it is nice to be able to use a TUI to select the staging files, so this works out perfectly.
One of the people reverse engineering the M1 GPU for Asahi Linux is a catgirl vtuber: https://www.youtube.com/asahilina
Nah… wrap entire templates in @if
statements.
It’s kinda amazing how someone can work so hard to sabotage their own public image.
The problem is that if you send a message just blindly, you can be tricked into sending spam to millions of addresses. I do one thing that prevents that, but does violate the standard, I verify there’s only 1 ‘@’ in the address… this technically prevents people with '@'s in their name, but they probably find it impossible to do anything with that address anyway.
State machines always make me think of the Disk II controller on the Apple II. It uses a state machine to implement reading and writing sectors to disk.
https://www.bigmessowires.com/2021/11/12/the-amazing-disk-ii-controller-card/
Back before it was awful, sourceforge required your code to be in CVS and then later svn.
Another benefit from working from home: I will happily spend my own money on a good chair, keyboard, etc. I spent 20 years working in an office and there’s no way I would’ve ever brought in my own chair during that time… I would’ve had to become the chair police to prevent it from getting “reappropriated”
Interesting. A year ago I was looking for something exactly like this for distributing data between multiple servers. Everything required a ton of overhead or was too big to use. I ended up just using json. I did discover that Brotli can compress 3 gigs of json down into just 70 megs nearly instantly.
One of our data providers gives us hundred megabyte json files. Whenever there is a problem with the data they request examples, jq
is invaluable in those instances.
And yet it’s still easy to write spaghetti code in Java. Just abuse inheritance. Where is this function implemented? No one knows but the compiler!