The question is more like where else would you put your backups?
No, it is not.
Distributed Parallel Lisp Computing Experiment
I installed Sparky Linux 7 on my backup laptop computer because I failed to install Debian.
Maybe Sparky Linux ...
Normally, I use Debian. However, Debian 12 installer didn't work on my Acer Extensa 💻. So I installed Sparky Linux, and it works.
People claiming Linux isn’t a viable alternative cause you can’t run it without using the command line.
Even in 2024, many people begin using GNU/Linux with Arch Linux or Ubuntu with apt-get, then later they complain that Linux is not for average users. Maybe the community needs more GUI only tutorials.
YouTube Video
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The video offers a practical example of using Ubuntu for web development, reminiscent of the Rails screencasts popular two decades ago. Back then, many software developers I met still believed the iBook G4 was primarily for desktop publishing, not software development.
Like Thinkpad, the main brand is Lenovo. Thinkbook keyboard is like Acer and other brands.
I'm using Lenovo ThinkBook, which is cheaper than Thinkpad, and the keyboard layout is different. It supports upto 40GB of RAM.
For over twenty years, the Mac was the default at 37signals. For designers, programmers, support, and everyone else. That mono culture had some clear advantages, like being able to run Kandji and macOS-specific setup scripts. But it certainly also had its disadvantages, like dealing with Apple's awf...
dhh is the creator of Ruby on Rails. He has extensively used Mac for decades. A few months ago, as far as I remember, he mentioned something like switching to Windows and WSL.
Meta has released the latest entry in its Llama series of open generative AI models: Llama 3. Or, more accurately, the company has debuted two models in its new Llama 3 family, with the rest to come at an unspecified future date. Meta describes the new models -- Llama 3 8B, which contains 8 billio...
Linq
LINQ is remarkable.
Stored procedure and Datalog are not what I'm looking for. However, I should consider them seriously, since they may be more practical.
b but has nice
Thank you. This is exactly what I'm looking for.
link
Yes, I've used this.
properly parametrized and escaped and all that
I'm not sure if what I use is proper enough in your sense. So, can you elaborate more?
Is there a programming language specifically designed for interacting with SQL databases that avoids the need for Object-Relational Mappers (ORMs) to solve impedance mismatch from the start?
If such a language exists, would it be a viable alternative to PHP or Go for a web backend project?
RK3588 is used in many Linux devices, but I'm not sure if Rockchip is in the BDS list. I don't know which factory was RK3588 from.
I heard that Linux gets new patches for Loongson, but I didn't try it yet.
#[allow(unused_assignments)]
Thank you. This works!
It doesn't work, at least, on rustc 1.75.
Clippy didn't tell anything about the macro.
warning: dereferencing a tuple pattern where every element takes a reference
--> src/lib.rs:13:9
|
13 | &Some(ref cons_rc) => {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#needless_borrowed_reference
= note: `#[warn(clippy::needless_borrowed_reference)]` on by default
help: try removing the `&` and `ref` parts
|
13 - &Some(ref cons_rc) => {
13 + Some(cons_rc) => {
|
To put #[allow(this_linting_rule)] like this:
[ $x:expr, $( $y:expr ),* ] => {
#[allow(unused_assignments)]
{
I got error[E0658]: attributes on expressions are experimental.
To put it like this:
#[macro_export]
#[allow(unused_assignments)]
macro_rules! list {
() => {
None
It doesn't work.
Removing last will break my library.
```Rust #[macro_export] macro_rules! list { () => { None }; [ $x:expr, $( $y:expr ),* ] => { { let mut first = cons($x, &None); let mut last = &mut first; $( let yet_another = cons($y, &None); if let Some(ref mut last_inner) = last { let last_mut = Rc::get_mut(last_inner).unwrap(); last_mut.cdr = yet_another; last = &mut last_mut.cdr; } )* first } } }
```
This macro works as I expected because it can pass these tests.
```Rust #[test] fn dolist() { let mut v = vec![]; dolist!((i &cons(10, &list![20, 30, 40])) { v.push(i.car); }); assert_eq!(v, vec![10, 20, 30, 40]); }
#[test] fn turn_list_to_vec() { assert_eq!(list_to_vec(&list![1, 2, 3]), vec![1, 2, 3]); }
#[test] fn count_elements() { assert_eq!(list_len(&list![10, 20, 30]), 3); }
```
However I got the warning "value assigned to last is never read."
How can I avoid this warning?
P.S. Full code
Will they keep patching old version of PHP?
Because of the Redhat incident, I started to see people asking for community-based distros without a corporate that dominates the community. And, Mageia is one of them. So, I hope it will be more popular.
- KDE is the default. So, for KDE users, Mageia with KDE was tested.
- Mageia comes with Drake tools for configuring almost everything. IMO *drakes look quite friendly. Since they have been around for 20+ years, they must be stable.
- Each release will be supported for 18 months, which is longer than Fedora.
Such files are relatively easy to create and read, as they are basically shell scripts.
I agree. I lean towards writing in Bash script instead of learning yet another special-purpose language. Nonetheless, the RPM spec doesn't seem to pose any additional difficulty.
I anticipate that my application might encounter an issue that requires debugging or fixing using nREPL, but I'm concerned about the potential performance impact of using nREPL.