It’s just that there are lots of stuff that don’t really work (out of the box) with Wayland systems, an example being getting an IME with ibus/fcitx5 to work in browsers.
It’s just that there are lots of stuff that don’t really work (out of the box) with Wayland systems, an example being getting an IME with ibus/fcitx5 to work in browsers.
I agree with you. It’s a neat design idea to make things a bit more maintainable perhaps, but it’s just annoying to program with.
The something else is called kanji, and are very complicated characters stolen from China with many meanings and pronunciation. Learning Japanese is very 楽しい (it is really)
Rust is used more Ethan you think
I’m also German, and our beautiful language being compared to java feels like an insult to me.
Strength in diversity, I guess
Thanks for answering my frustrated questions, was a long day yesterday. I’ll try to understand the deeper truths later, but I can already tell the matrix stuff goes over my head.
It should be easy, it’s just analysis but with an added dimension, basically. How is it so hard? How is it that the more I’m “learning” for that damn math exam the less I know? Why do I need it in the first place? Why have exams at all? I know what I know, and it’s not like I’m learning anything by preparing for them. I hate exams so much, it’s so stressful.
I doubt you have the answers to that, even if you did, they wouldn’t really help. So let’s ask something useful, since you’re offering.
What the hell is a total derivative, and why is it suddenly the same as a tangential plane?
Why is the gradient just a collection of the first partial derivatives? How’s a tuple of them any useful? Apparently it’s showing the direction of steepest ascend or something? I don’t get it.
I’m not chilling. Second try on multivariate analysis in a week. I don’t want to fail.
(Yes I’m procrastinating by writing this comment)
Fron what I gather, visual studio is a horrible monolith that also contains C/C++/C++++ build stuff.
Peak editing with vim/neovim
Are you talking licenses or certificates? Because if certificates are not automated that’s not a problem with certificates but with administration.
I found open-ssl to be much harder to use. Do you just manually make new certificates with the CA in CLI?
At some point it’s good to let things die
In that case, i recommend step-ca, which is a certificate authority server with acme support anyone can self host. The setup took a while but it’s been running for months now without problems for me.
No proper CA should give out a certificate for an IP, that’s a no go by the common rules.
The background is that certificate revocation is a broken system and having short lived certificates makes the problem go away. You don’t need to worry about how to tell people that some certificate is bad if it’s only valid for a few days.
Ideally, certificates would only be valid for a few days, it should be automated anyway. This has other downsides as I can imagine, like creation of more traffic. My self signed CA for my home LAN has 4 days as standard, and it works perfectly fine.
SCP-5300 😮
At that point it’s an act of rebellion against that nations authority over its territory, and the police/armed forces may step in.
I see what you’re doing but that chain of thought doesn’t lead anywhere.
A laptop also counts.
Actually depending on the definition, everyone that uses the www uses Linux, but that doesn’t help.
You are making prejudiced, generalized, assumptions and presenting them as facts.
You are at best naive if you think people use vim and a terminal instead of “better graphical alternatives” (which there are none of if you’ve really gotten into vim/emacs/whatever). And we don’t do it to seem hardcore (maybe we are, but that’s a side effect). Software in the terminal is often more simple to use, because it allows chaining together outputs and has often simpler user interfaces.
The second paragraph is word salad. Developers should name their shit properly regardless of editor and it’s quite simple to have a professional dev setup with ‘intellisense’ and auto complete in neovim. In fact, vim/neovim and I assume emacs too have much more features and flexibility of which users of IDEs or vscode wouldn’t so much as think of.
I assume your prejudice comes from the fact that vim is not a “one size fits all no configuration needed” integrated development environment (IDE) but rather enables the user to personalize it completely to their own wishes, a Personalized Development Environment. In that regard, using one of the “better graphical tools” is like a mass produced suit while vim is like a tailor made one.
Just let people use what they like. Diversity is a strength.