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But however will it determine the player one controller … on a desktop computer?
But however will it determine the player one controller … on a desktop computer?
If you look deeper at the recorded PR commit, comments, and package description it’s clearly straight up mean-spirited.
Yep, I’ve even personally witnessed the arguments in business to business sales. When the marketing gets invited, sanity is no longer a welcome.
I have two words for you, “compensating controls.”
It’s like goddamn magic.
Zenos. Zenos. Zenos.
I cannot update this enough. Just completed the Endbringer MSQ, and holy hell. His entire character, premise, every stupid monologue, every cutscene, his entire arc. Banal and awful. Felt like some 6yo on DBZ crack wrote his entire plotline.
I just searched for any reference of Zenos and I’m glad you posted this. His existence serves zero purpose in the story. Zero.
That is all, thank you!
Is it bad my third thought after “🥰” and “unrequited love 😢” was immediately “oh gods I hope it doesn’t start marking the porch”?
Virtualization in general? Sure, I can. I’ve tried it a bit with bhyve. But it’s definitely a lot heavier since I’m now running a full Linux os and dedicating resources to it to run docker just to run a python or node app.
Learning the project is in Go though is a sigh of relief. Professionally I’ve moved to Go (from Python) just because it’s so damn easy to build and distribute.
I just wish there was better support for the other *nix’s. While the language support them just fine, docker on the other hand strangles it. =(
For me it’s more like new interesting self hosted project and then find out it’s only distributed as a docker container without any proper packaging. As someone who runs FreeBSD, this is a frustration I’ve run into with quite a number of projects.
For sure! I was just thinking of a species that’ll outlive humanity. :D
I thought roach myself.
Yeeap. My FreeBSD box has such pain with 'em. Because unfortunately *bsd is not in Python’s precompiled wheels. So one is almost building from the source.
Now every time I pip install something there’s a high likelihood I’m going to end up having to install the rust tool chain and burn so much time on building libraries. I get why the project made the switch, but man does it hurt being downstream of it.
Every time I see a project decide to use rust I groan knowing my build/packaging time is about to skyrocket. Case in point, the Python cryptography project.
And given cryptography’s importance in the Python ecosystem what used to be an easy pip install of a package now almost always going to include is an enormous and horribly slow rust build environment.
Seeing a rust libraryjust makes me sad now 😭
My gods. I think this just gave me flashbacks to this week.
I was recently battling node’s import/require shenanigans trying to figure out how to import a typescript module in my basic program. I feel this so hard.
I walked away utterly hating the language and its ecosystem. Utterly defeated, I gave up.
Metamucil Bulk Fiber
All the generics are awful in taste or consistency (for instance not being as finely ground it seems). And weirdly in Kirkland Signature’s case, foamy.
Stupid expensive for what it is. But the effect is worth it.
Edit: sigh, autocorrect, you are the worst.
I’m not so sure about the boilover bit. But the primary purpose is that they trap bubbles underneath which causes it to rattle like crazy when the water is boiling.
Sigh, amusing but really unnecessary effort.
There done.
I’m going to try to help explain this, but i’ll be honest it feels like you’re coming from a place of frustration. I’m sorry about that, take a break :)
(I’m not a language expert, but here goes)
These are the two forms of variable declaration and the second one is a declaration and initialization short hand. I most commonly use
:=
. For instance:foo := 1 // it's an int! var bar uint16 // variable will be assigned the zero value for unit16 which is unsurprisingly, 0.
This has no return type because it returns no values. It does not require passing
u
. It’s a method on the User type, specificallyu User
is a method receiver. You might think of this akin toself
orthis
variable in other languages. By convention it is a singke character of the type’s name.If that function returned a value it might look like:
func(u User) hi() string { return "hi!" }
This is confusing because of how it’s written. But the intent is to have a map (aka dictionary or hashmap) with
string
keys andint
values. In your example it’s initializd to have no entries, the{}
. Let me rewrite this a different way:ages := map[string]int{ "Alice": 38, "Bob": 37, }
Hope this helps. In all honesty, Go’s language is very simple and actually rather clear. There’s definitely some funny bits, but these aren’t it. Take a break, come back to it later. It’s hard to learn if you are frustrated.
I also recommend doing the Tour of Go here. My engineers who found Go intimidating found it very accessible and helped them get through the learning code (as there is with any language).
Good luck (I’m on mobile and didn’t check my syntax, hopefully my code works 😎)