Good point
maybe I underestimate how we will be in 100 years. maybe you overestimate it
But it’s a cool ideia nonetheless
Good point
maybe I underestimate how we will be in 100 years. maybe you overestimate it
But it’s a cool ideia nonetheless
it’s a cool idea, but probably not a good one
Too much money would be spent to simply get people from point A to point B faster
and why do it this fast? these reasons outweigh the price to build such a thing?
An anti-virus company’s rep comes by every couple of months, always bringing stuff that we distribute randomly.
I have a water bottle, bag, notebook (paper, not computer kind), and backpack already :)
Even if they do have the same in-memory representation, you may want to assert types as different just by name.
AccountID: u64
TransactionID: u64
have the same in-memory representation, but are not interchangeable.
the vim-visual-multi plugin tries to do this. It takes some time to get the hang of it, but, even if using only the simplest features, it’s way better than not having the option.
Eu não sou seu parça, camarada
it depends on the cloth you have
I live in a very warm country
I literally don’t have clothes that I could use if the temperature got negative
“src/utils/typing: added tests for isArray”
we have 90% coverage minimum
Is it not about chaining processes?
IIRC the ideia was to use pipe (or other methods) to send one program’s output to another’s input
But it very well could be about reusable functions, as code or as a .so file
I don’t know how luxon works, but isWeekend could be a property instead of a function
Im pretty sure tsoding has some videos with it
yeah I just thought it was kinda funny
the house was stuck
I’ll take this as a complement mano
Yeah!
it’s basically a noop, I use it as a placeholder when I’m writing a script, since bash doesn’t accept code blocks with no commands
or :>>file
then you don’t need to interrupt
I would agree if OP was trying to get a job as a developer, however I don’t think they are.
It’s more like you used a beaker for something and shook it to mix water and salt, it’s not the recommended way, but it’s fine.
You can’t go wrong with Visual Studio Code (AKA VSCode). It’s easy to pick up on, there are some pretty neat extensions and it works for seveal languages.
However there are IDEs specific to some languages, like PyCharm for python. While they usually have some cool features, your child will probably not need to use them.
Good luck :)
julia and ruby are pretty common also
You can just alias to do this in the programs you do use
Sure, the first time you won’t have this enabled, but after that it just works.