How did you find Leptos to work with? I never got further than the tutorial so I have yet to form a real opinion on it.
New account since lemmyrs.org went down, other @Deebster
s are available.
How did you find Leptos to work with? I never got further than the tutorial so I have yet to form a real opinion on it.
Oh, you’re right - somehow I missed seeing the entire bottom third of the image.
And they’ve highlighted the whole of the UK for “England”. Scotland has the thistle, Wales has the daffodil and Wikipedia says that flax is widely used as a symbol of Northern Ireland.
I think of England’s rose as red, because of the rugby.
Why are you quoting a US site for a case in China?
Conversely, if the pricing is due to an error, the company can petition the court to annul the purchase contract, allowing it to refund customers without the necessity of delivering the goods.
Surely, this will apply.
It’s a subtle difference between that and path::exists()
.
path::exists()
== false
might just mean you can’t use it (if path::exists() cannot access a file due to e.g. permissions, it’ll return false)fs::exists()
== Ok(false)
means it’s definitely not there (permissions error will cause an Err to be returned)Bad wording on my part, I wasn’t disagreeing. My file server has a /files directory because it saves me a few key strokes and because I can.
Is Gobo case-insensitive by default? Typing those seems annoying.
That’s an old image, though - Windows has a C:\Users\youruser setup like /home/youruser for a while now.
I find the %APPDATA% thing way less convenient than ~/.config and I’m quite happy when programs have the “bug” that they still use ~/.config on Windows.
I like that idea of using the different fonts for e.g. Copilot suggestions - reminds me of reading Asterix comics as a kid when they’d use gothic black for the Goth’s speech, etc.
edit: e.g.
There’s kroki as well, which includes Mermaid, Excalidraw, GraphViz, PlantUML, etc.
The results are so close it seems like they’d be within the error bars.
For me it’s the Intellivision with its controllers that were attached with phone cords and those plastic inserts that would customise the controller for each game.
I think we only had one game, Triple Action (although only the tanks and biplanes were worth playing).
My parents’ house still has more vintage tech than most computer museums.
Well yeah, you need to do the computation somewhere and it’s not doing it on the server so…
I’ve been using Vimium C, but as it’s based on Vimium it may have the same problem.
Ah bollocks, another trusted voice silenced. Now it’ll be that slight bit harder to find a review that isn’t just parroting stuff from the press release.
I’m of the belief that spawning threads on demand is an anti-pattern; threads should spawn on program startup, and sleep until they have work to do.
Hmm, I need to think on this to decide whether I agree. What’s your reasoning for this opinion? Is it just based on lower latency, or is it more of an architectural/correctness thing?
Ukraine have destroyed three bridges in Kursk, which will affect Russia’s ability to get supplies to their invading forces, but they’re also over rivers where it’s fairly trivial to set up temporary bridges (unless they are destroyed by drones).
It’s saying modern marshmallows are made with corn syrup, starch, sugar and gelatin but originally it was made with mallow plant.
Now I want to try the mallow version - has anyone here tried them?
Token-based string distances looks like exactly what I need for my current side project - I’m using Levenshtein but I should be comparing based on words, not characters.
I just need to figure out which (if any) of these does what I need.
Edit: looks like the Python version has that information: https://github.com/life4/textdistance?tab=readme-ov-file#algorithms