That’s just to use the online editor. It’s open source, and there’s a CLI you can run locally.
That’s just to use the online editor. It’s open source, and there’s a CLI you can run locally.
They’re semantically different for PATCH requests. The first does nothing, the second should unset the name
field.
I miss Trillian :(
The company has taken action against violations of its policies, she said
What does this mean in this context? Send takedown notices to people who joke on the Internet?
I pay for YouTube. I’m mildly optimistic that this won’t make it into the paid version, but I also wouldn’t be surprised if it does.
I’ve already had to cancel Amazon Prime after they made the base tier have ads, but continued to show ads after paying extra for ad-free.
Hardware cloth is a metal mesh.
Then, you could take those comments, and have the compiler use them to ensure you’re using the right variable in the right place. Oh wait, we just invented a type system.
Works even better in Ruby, as the code as given is valid, you just need to monkey patch length
:
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
module DayLength
def length
if ["Sunday", "Monday", "Tuesday", "Wednesday", "Thursday", "Friday", "Saturday"].include? self
"24 hours"
else
super
end
end
end
class String
prepend DayLength
end
day = "Monday"
x = day.length
print(x)
It could be Ruby; puts
is more common, but there is a print
. With some silly context, the answer could even be correct:
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
module DayLength
def length
if ["Sunday", "Monday", "Tuesday", "Wednesday", "Thursday", "Friday", "Saturday"].include? self
"24 hours"
else
super
end
end
end
class String
prepend DayLength
end
day = "Monday"
x = day.length
print(x)
I’m sorry to hear that. I think at one point in my past, about half my job was tracking down nil dereference errors in Ruby. And probably a quarter was writing tests for things a good type system would catch at compile time.
But you can delete your copy, ask others nicely to delete theirs, and refuse to accept more copies of the same thing.
I’m not sure if Lemmy supports any of this, but it seems pretty important for e.g. child porn.
Your white led is a blue led with a phosphorescent coating.
It’s still wild to me that I visited Hawaii as a kid, and then several years later. When I went back, a road I had driven on as kid was covered in lava.
What? The people who made him buy it got paid already. I’m sure they’re laughing every time they see it drop in value.
Python with numpy/matplotlib/scipy.
It’s really not at these scales. Earth and Mars go from roughly 4 light minutes apart to over 20.
At the best case, saying something and then waiting 8 minutes for a response is hardly what I’d call “real time”.
I’m not so sure. The study discusses specifically people who engage in partisan subreddits, which is not the same as being politically engaged. It also uses an AI to grade toxicity, which surely mischaracterizes many interactions.
For example, I have been in communities of a non-political nature, where political discussions occur. These are often about real issues that affect real people in the community, and yet there are people complaining about political content.
To complain about political content is, at best, a very privileged take, demonstrating that you are in a position where politics do not affect you much. At worst, it is actively hostile behavior with the goal of continuing the status quo and shutting down discourse. I would call most of these kinds of comments “toxic”, and yet the rhetoric is usually fine, so I doubt an AI would agree.
Linux gaming is already here.
Not if you use 2 factor to access the password manager.