Not for long if Lennart has anything to say about it, I’m sure.
Not for long if Lennart has anything to say about it, I’m sure.
The European Union is a confederation, just like the United States under the Articles of Confederation was.
People in North America identified with their colony/state first, and the United States second back in the 1700s. Give it time…
I get that they’re different countries, but different states here might as well be.
^ This guy Articles of Confederation.
(Seriously, the European Union basically has the same kind of structure now as the United States did between 1776 and 1789.)
Edit: wait… return ! 0 ; wtf
I mean, returning non-zero exit status on error is just good practice. It even managed to evaluate to the same numerical value as EXIT_FAILURE
when I tested it on my machine (gcc 11.4.0 linux x86-64), although I’m not sure if that’s always the case or if it’s undefined behavior.
This cursed code is quite well-written.
Yes, as are n
and i
. Do they not deserve ‘fleekness?’
I have a similar issue (also Firefox on [K]ubuntu 22.04) every time I open a link on a logged-in site in a new tab, but in my case merely refreshing the page is enough to get me logged back in.
I assume is most likely the fault of the fairly aggressive mix of extensions I’m running rather than Firefox itself, but I haven’t actually tried to troubleshoot it yet.
Pro tip: the arguments to main()
don’t have to be named argc
and argv
.
Also, you forgot to #define an alias for atoi
, and number
, n
, and i
could’ve been named something more on fleek.
That’s the thing that annoys me most about Duolingo: if they’re going to show you ads, the least they could do is show you ones in the language you’re trying to learn instead of your native one.
I don’t care what the excuses are; they aren’t valid.
Considering that this is new capacity, not total capacity, it’s a fucking absurd outrage that it’s anything less than 100.0%.
Every percentage point less than that represents us continuing to make the problem even worse even though we goddamn well know better!
I wish there were a selfhosted alternative that would sync with banks like mint.com does, but I haven’t found one yet.
I’ve also dabbled a little trying to make one, but it seems like banks don’t really want you to use their API unless you’re Intuit.
Jellyfin is to Plex as Lemmy is to Reddit.
It keeps track of which files you’ve played (e.g. to automatically pick the next episode in a series), it automatically downloads metadata and cover art so you have a nice browsing interface, it manages multiple profiles so that e.g. you can limit your kids’ access to only G and TV-Y or filter out genres a user doesn’t like, it lets you set parental controls to limit the amount of time watched in a day (or disable it at certain times of day), etc.
ITT: folks who think Linux is too complicated or whatever, but are perfectly willing to jump through endless hoops to work around some of Windows’ deliberate hostility.
The Stockholm syndrome is real.
The name made me think it was made by the same company that makes these.
wildly different from what a regular social media looks like.
It’s wildly different from what social media moderated by corporations looks like, but I’m not so sure which is “regular.”
It’s used in a lot of smoking/roasting applications to keep the moisture in. Just don’t let it touch the element and you should be fine.
What is this, “el-em-ent?” I don’t understand. Are you talking about the hot coals?
(On a related note, Hank Hill was wrong.)
US, mid thirties, and I not only drive a manual transmission, I go out of my way to insist upon it. For example, I own a truck and an SUV made in the '90s because it’s difficult to find newer ones without an automatic.