Same person as @Gobbel2000@feddit.de, different instance.
Snake case and kebab case mixed arbitrarily.
man -k
to the rescue: mbsrtowcs
, strxfrm
and wcstold
are C functions.
Oh goodie, AMD SDCIAE PQE with PCIe TPH.
The fact that every 4-digit pin is in this picture shows quite well how these are pretty easy to crack.
Ever since I’ve understood that it accepts objectively wrong answers as long as it somehow seems as if you gave it some thought, I’ve made sure to hinder the accuracy of models that try to use my data.
When you import circles
in the test file (even if you only select circles_area
) the circles file basically gets executed from top to bottom to run all definitions at the point of the import statement. This executes your for loop which fails, and the actual tests are never run. Just remove that loop in the circles module, and it should work.
I must say I like the idea of having changes to files be bound to just the current branch, not the entire worktree (section 6.4.2), but other than that the points that are brought up don’t really seem too compelling. It certainly didn’t convince me that git has an inherently flawed design. For example, eliminating the staging area is a tempting point for simplifying git, but the authors already admit that it has some legitimate use cases.
But of course it is always nice to see some experimentation done in this space. I think the main reason why git sometimes is confusing, is because distributed version control really is a complex task, and git already does a very good job at making it tractable.
Huh? Hexagonal Architecture?
Natürlich! Wo sollen Erdnüsse sonst herkommen, wenn nicht aus der Erde?
While there certainly is some overlap, Python is a scripting language and not a shell language. Some tasks that involve calling lots of different programs and juggling input and output streams are much easier done in bash than in Python.
I won’t argue with you that bash is janky and easily insecure, but what shell language do you think should replace bash?
Jon Gjengset on Youtube is doing live coding where he uses neovim quite well. And you’ll learn about Rust while you’re at it.
I (luckily) haven’t had much experience using autotools, but I do suppose it was no coincidence that the injection was initiated there. I really like the comparison that was made in the post of the Meson maintainer you linked:
Several “undefeatable” fortresses have been taken over by attackers entering via sewage pipes.
Alright, but seriously: IPv6.