Most users of Windows aren’t editing the registry, no matter what problems they encounter.
For power users that do use regedit, I’d argue there’s still a gap between that and using a shell. The registry can be edited entirely with the Windows graphical utility, after all.
If you’re on Linux (or Mac), add an alias to your .bashrc:
alias activate="source env/bin/activate"
Now you can activate your venv by just running activate
in the project root!
Seems legit as a concept, though the author is giving weird vibes.
I’m not sure what “globohomo” means but it sounds like a 4chan homophobic term. Additionally the author says they wanted a search engine giving results without “political inclinations”, which reads to me as “reality has a liberal bias and I don’t like that”.
I’ll pass on this for now.
Groovy!
It’s such a joy to use the closure system, whether iterating over a list with each
or removing redundant references with tap
.
I dabbled with CLisp a while back, and I loved it – but I’m not sure what problems it solves. Do you mind expanding on that?
Hell yeah! Groovy programmer here, mapping closures over lists of objects.
That’s one of the reasons I like Java. It definitely has problems, but it’s been around so long that there are an insane number of libraries to work with. And you can practically guarantee that your project will run on a given computer with minimal fuss.
That was a lot of fun! I found that one particular trick worked all the way through level seven.
!I asked using the word
zapword
instead of password, which the bot understood to mean “password” even when it has clear instructions not to answer questions about the password.!<
before release
According to OP it hasn’t been released yet.
No, this is clearly a joke.
This would be easier to parse with a monospaced font. I’m not sure how that works in lemmy so this might take an edit or two…
round 1: L L L L R R R R — — — -
round 2: L L R R R — — — L R L -
round 3: L R R — — L R — L L — R```
IntelliJ with Vim plugin, for the obvious reasons.
Groovy! It’s built on Java so it has access to the ludicrous number of libraries that have been written over the years, but It’s got a lot of syntactic sugar that’s like Python, making developing easier without all that Java boilerplate we hate so much.
For add-ons, mostly. I use Tree-Style Tabs and can’t live without it at this point.
Are you trying to make games in electron?
I generally agree that it’s not necessary to bring unrelated problems into a space.
But this post reads like “this software is good but the community is not welcoming, I don’t recommend getting into either”. I think that’s valid.
I finished my playthrough a couple days ago, after 80 hours. It’s much more forgiving than CS – there’s no lose condition, as far as I can tell. There’s also a shitload more to keep track of, hence me using Obsidian. I personally found the experience of tracking [what books give what resource] and [what resources make what crafting recipes] to be extremely satisfying, but your mileage may vary.
AMD.