I like range-based for loops. You can just name the iterator after the object that it actually is. Have to be a little careful though, if the container is named a plural noun, and the natural name is the same word minus the easy-to-miss ‘s’.
I like range-based for loops. You can just name the iterator after the object that it actually is. Have to be a little careful though, if the container is named a plural noun, and the natural name is the same word minus the easy-to-miss ‘s’.
I’ve never been on digg before. I thought it was more analogous to Reddit, but that just looks like a locally hosted article?
I’ve never seen it before. I guess I’m really lucky I picked lemmy.world (mostly blindly). Sounds like it’s the best-of-all-worlds instance.
Just one ply!
Yeah, I feel like it may be enough that things like Lemmy have gotten their foot in the door.
I just heard some supposedly inspirational blurb on the radio about a guy getting let go in the 2008 financial crisis, and going on to invent the instant pot. Funny little thing. It’s a great device (my mother loves hers). Hopefully the product continues on past the bankruptcy.
I think there’s a website called “xkcd explained”, or something.
I haven’t been able to get into NMS. I’m thinking of giving it yet another try, since I have PCVR (there’s that major VR update).
But yeah, I’m deep into Tears of the Kingdom. 105 hours in, and I still haven’t beaten it.
I’m mostly distracted away from my Steam Deck by Tears of the Kingdom right now. One thing I love about the Steam Deck is the controls—I’m an avid Steam Controller user, as well. Because of that, I actually like playing stuff “more suited” to my desktop, thanks to the Steam Deck’s superior controls. Elden Ring, for example.
I think everyone should try Gentoo at least once, for the experience. Why download binaries when you can compile everything?