Gnome used to have a link to your homedir in its settings directory.
I imagine plenty of people had tons of fun with that. But you need to modify rm to follow symlinks nowadays.
Gnome used to have a link to your homedir in its settings directory.
I imagine plenty of people had tons of fun with that. But you need to modify rm to follow symlinks nowadays.
Yeah, that site was good before they started rejecting every useful question.
It used to be much better than anything else that came earlier. Nowadays the odds are even that you’ll find your answer on the experts-one.


Python still has the -i option, and it still runs the same language as the files interface.


It’s a scripting language. What means that the computer runs it line by line, without needing to get the entire project first.


not object oriented
I don’t think we have a name for what you are trying to say here.
(And yeah, “object oriented” isn’t it.)
The definition of a script is something the computer executes (if it’s a computer script, of course). Everything else people shove into it is extraneous.


I’m so terrified about it that I check dozens of times before running it. So, no.
But I’m a repeat offender with rm -rf * .o
JS needs to know about styles?
It’s about JS trying to detect if the link was visited, not about style. People used to do that to evade cross-site tracking protection, and this is why JS isn’t allowed to know that anymore.


The one option that is mandated by an ISO standard.
Besides, if max and min are going to have a value without any parameter, it has to be exactly those Javascript uses. Unless you have a type that define other bounds for your numbers. And null always have a pointer type (that is object in Javascript), for the same reason that NaN always have a number type.
The only one that is bad on that list is D.
Apart from dynamically typed languages which need to store the type with the value
You know that depending on what your code does, the same C that people are talking upthread doesn’t even need to allocate memory to store a variable, right?
And compiler. And hardware architecture. And optimization flags.
As usual, it’s some developer that knows little enough to think the walls they see around enclose the entire world.
GNU tar is easy and straight-forward.
It’s also completely incompatible with any other Unix, but then, what difference does it make is nobody can use them?
Nah, they are fairly common rocks.
We can even use extremely common ones, but the just a little bit uncommon ones need an easier forming spell.
Longer than the life span of the most long-lived star. By orders of magnitude.
I’d go with a prefix, so it’s ls-friendly.
Really-long term storage :)
No problem, just use another AI to write reports about the vulnerabilities on the code and send them to the development team.
Nah, it’s stupid either way.
“5e-7” is not an int to be parsed. Neither is “0.5”.
Yeah, somehow it’s always that same guy!
Firefox does that out of the box.