@ajsadauskas I think Github’s awesome lists are kind of like this. They’re human-maintained catalogues of worthwhile websites on a specific topic.
Software Developer, Switzerland
Languages: German, Allemanic (Swiss German), English
Hobbies: Gaming, Anime
I almost only watch seasonal anime.
As for games, I currently mostly play Star Rail, Noita, and Shotgun King.
@ajsadauskas I think Github’s awesome lists are kind of like this. They’re human-maintained catalogues of worthwhile websites on a specific topic.
Depends on what the purpose of the button is.
A setting should show the current state, but an action (referring to the play button example) should show the state it’ll transition to.
Maybe in comparison to the US layout? I’m not having any trouble with them.
If you mean the [] (and {}), they just use the right alt key, which is close enough to them.
I just use the Swiss keyboard layout. Here’s an image from Wikipedia.
Don’t have any experience with any others.
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I’m pretty sure they were using sarcasm.
For example, I finally learned how something works after months of trying to wrap my head around it. Didn’t end up using it for a few months more, and now I forgot it again. I’m back to square one, trying to relearn things I already learned.
If this is such a frequent problem, start writing down what you’ve learnt. Get a notetaking app (my personal choice is obsidian) and record any knowledge that took you work to acquire. Then next time you need it you can just check your notes and there it is, instead of having to put all that work into it again.
With regular search, I have to look through all kinds of results before I find something, and often I have to adjust my search parameters until the search engine even understands what I’m looking for.
The AI still needs me to actually confirm what it’s saying, but that’s checking 1-3 links, not entire search result pages.
It’s also just waaaaay easier to talk to my search engine in natural language than keywords imo. I never know what keywords get me to my intended destination, I guess the difference is less big for people that do.
The great thing about Bing Chat compared to other chatbots is that it sources its claims. I always check the sources before trusting it.
That’s why I use Copilot.
Asked it for the official documentation, got a link to the /current/ documentation’s chapter on operators. Then asked for the heading about the IN operator and it gave me all four of the numbers. No need to wade through outdated or irrelevant results.