F8 is for “execute selected code”
Then again, F5 is for “run current script” or “compile and run program”…
F8 is for “execute selected code”
Then again, F5 is for “run current script” or “compile and run program”…
Holy forking shirtballs, the longer I look at that the worse it gets
As a PowerShell scripter, having the backtick and pipe keys moved with the escape and delete in their places would just drive me batty
This.
Google isn’t pro privacy, they’re anti competitive.
The old GRUB was easy, just a text file… I think I’ve done it once in the new one but it’s way too long since then
I bet either the Gentoo or Arch (or probably both) wiki has enough details on how to manage GRUB to do that
You use your mouse for GRUB?
To be fair, Microsoft has been a surprisingly good steward of the gaming companies they’ve acquired
Morally, ethically, and financially
I guess technology never grows or changes at all
“This question is similar to these questions which might prove useful to some people looking for help”
The number of times I’ve found someone actually asking my question being closed as a duplicate of another that isn’t at all my question is aggravatingly high
Not to mention how frustrating it is to almost always get top results that are just closed as duplicates, like, then why is this the top result and not the one that actually has answers?
Doesn’t 7zip do that?
I’d say subways but I don’t think the tunnels are big enough so they’d probably have to be re-bored larger and then re-reinforced
But probably a better use for the system than what they tried to do
There’s irony somewhere in this, I can feel it
That is what we like to call a “gateway drug”, first they try out an Android, then “just a taste” of Steam Deck, and next thing you know they’re installing arch btw on their grandparents’ computers
And this is exactly why I wouldn’t do my own, I had no idea either of those were legal/possible
What claim, that I probably could? I didn’t say anything at all about it being easy, it would be a pain in the ass and involve a lot of checking the RFC, but I could probably make one that accurately represents the spec if I wanted to take the time, and even then I’m not exactly confident I would hit every edge case.
But why would I go to that hassle when there are well designed and vetted ones available?
I believe you missed the point I was making
Embrace
Extend
Extinguish
And this right here is a great example of why simple basic RegEx is rarely adequate
At the very least, should be something like
^[^@\s]+@([^@\s.]+\.)+[^@\s.]+$
I’m like 99% sure I missed at least a few cases there, and will say “please don’t use this for anything production”
I’d love to know where they got the idea that the spec doesn’t allow that…
“Don’t Be Evil”