Note: not every provider supports this.
Also, gmail addresses ignore periods. my.email@gmail.com and myem.ail+service@gmail.com will end up in the same inbox
reject humanity, become toaster | she/they | experimenting with names
Note: not every provider supports this.
Also, gmail addresses ignore periods. my.email@gmail.com and myem.ail+service@gmail.com will end up in the same inbox
You can use a DNS challenge to show you are in control of the domain without having anything exposed to the net. Essentially LE gives you a special value you have to add as a TXT DNS entry. LE will check if this record exists for your domain, and gives you a certificate, no public IP involved. This even allows you to create wildcard certificates.
Reverse Polish Notation works almost like you describe. You put the operands first, then the operation. For example:
Probably the reason why we are not using it is because most tools today use algebraic notation, and it would be a lot of effort to switch
it allows easy scripting. also for frequently used commands, i can just scroll up in the history, instead if clicking the same buttons over and over
each commit points to the one before. additionally a commit stores which lines in which files changed compared to the previous commit. a branch points to a particular commit.
it’s just linked lists of commits (except when merging)
I’m a bit inexperienced in this aspect, but:
you can also use the -f option to specify the compose file without going to it.
fun situations can arise when you write , instead of ; For those not in the know, in c++ the comma operator evaluates the left expression, discards the value, then evaluates the right expression and returns the value. if you now have a a situation like this
int i = 0,
printf("some message");
i has a completely different value, since it actually uses the return value of printf instead
proposal to rename exit() to oh_shit_oh_shit_oh_shit()
Yes, but why would you want to? We have enough addresses for the foreseeable future.