No, that’s Vim
No, that’s Vim
Spaces between paragraphs should work, you have to use two new lines for them.
They seem to work on my instance’s web interface and on Jerboa…
Tip:
you can replace your periods with three dashes to get a horizontal separator, which I think is what you were going for. It’s markdown syntax, it should work for most clients.
Yeah, that’s what I was thinking of. I don’t know how C++ could reasonably have Java-like reflections anyway…
Wouldn’t compilers be able to optimize runtime things out? I know that GCC does so for some basic RTTI things, when types are known at compile time.
I can see the footguns, but I can also see the huge QoL improvement - no more std::enable_if
spam to check if a class type has a member, if you can just check for them.
… at least I hope it would be less ugly than std::enable_if
.
Too other to’s? Isn’t that two much?
Java²script
The joke has been lost because the drive’s technology is ill-suited for permament storage.
If only we had a hard drive…
Nah, it’s just that /proc
is incorrect - it contains information about running processes, as well as kernel data structures as visible by the process reading them.
Wdym? flamingo_pinyata’s explaination was quite useful, I wish somebody had told me that long ago and it’s still going to let me save so much time.
I’ve used Windows for a bit more than a decade, and I only found out its VFS is case-insensitive (by default) after I fully ditched the OS, when a bunch of Electron applications created directories with different cases - nothing ever broke because of it, save for a single Godot game.
Personally, I think case-insensitivity seldom makes sense, though I’m also aware that not everyone [knows how / is able] to properly operate a keyboard.
It feels like /opt
's official meaning is completely lost on developers/packagers (depending on who’s at fault), every single directory in my /opt
belongs to standalone software that should just be put into either /usr/lib
or /usr/share
with some symlinks or scripts into /usr/bin
.
You know what else is justified?
Making puns about the word “dispose” and expecting people not to take them seriously and imparting a lecture.
… for the next 3 months, until a security update makes its way onto your device and also coincidentally breaks GRUB, hey look Recall is now enabled and opt-out.
You seem to have a rather violent disposition…
I imagine reflections would make the process more straightforward, requires expressions are powerful but either somewhat verbose or possibly incomplete.
For instance, in your example
foo
could have any of the following declarations in a class:void foo();
int foo() const;
template <typename T> foo(T = { }) &&;
decltype([]() { }) foo;