
There’s two nines there: “95 issues in last 90 days”

There’s two nines there: “95 issues in last 90 days”

Got Multiclass hero (Barbarian, Mage)

The last time I used notepad the undo option worked both as undo and redo, since it only kept the latest change and undoing was also a change that could be undone.
Pretty much any company that has their own IT team but is not an IT company, is most likely using Windows infrastructure.
since that shit makes it harder to read
It makes it harder to read the individual lines, but makes it easier to read them as a group, so you won’t have to read as many lines on your day to day.

TURN server doesn’t need to be free, you just need everyone to be able to access it.
The product I work on in my 9to5 would be perfect for your use case from the technical side of things but sadly the commercial side is a completely different story that makes it not even worth recommending.

I can’t handle Debian; my heart constantly craves shiny new things.
Careful, if you push them too much someone might make their own Linux, with Javascript (and hooks).

We’re reaching the point where the real money is in the materials for the tools.
Delphi could do complex GUIs pretty well. That makes me miss it sometimes.
You’d think that, and yet I’ve once worked in a project in a fortune 500 company that basically wouldn’t even compile if we didn’t add comments like that.
No kidding the compiler enforced specific comment patterns so if you had a line do x = x + 1, it would not compile if it was not preceded by a comment that started with “Add” and included “1” and “to x”. Even in dev mode if you wanted to just try something you had to comment everything.
The original dev was super proud of this tools that generated HTML documentation about everything based on those comments. And the whole documentation was stuff like:
*price*: The price
A friend of mine used to teach coding decades ago and one story I’ll never forget is about the student who had an assignment that asked for a “for” loop to be used, but they didn’t quite know how to use it so they just wrote a broken loop there and then hid a “while” loop at the far end of the line.
Code compiled, had a “for” loop and had the right output.
Oh right I hadn’t thought of combining it with the IP itself.
Would a fingerprint uniqueness hold up in court?
It kinda feels like saying: “we know the crime was committed by someone who’s this tall with this hair color and this skin color and has this tattoo on the right arm and who speaks these three languages and we have never seen anyone else who matches all of those things so it must be you”

At least when I had to create a DSL in a project I gave it a fitting name: Bullscript.
Same, though I’ve started having some issues with their slower updates not catching up to changes on OSs and stuff (using it on an atomic distro for example is quite a pain).
For me it was my older brother (who owned the only computer in the house). He had very strict rules about what I could do on his PC but even then he would only leave his room unlocked once a week at most. This was before I even cared for internet so being offline was no big deal.
When I was 13 I managed to talk my way into doing some chores for a neighborhood PC school in exchange for access to computers whenever there was some free spot in any of their classes. A couple years later they opened a Lan House so I worked there and could finally use PCs all day every day. One more year and I was already teaching programming classes there (well, trying to).
The DS would not be able to connect to OP’s network to begin with.

Is there even an ecosystem? I don’t think I have heard of anything for Lua itself, just the stuff that embed it.
Best I can do is password login that requires passwords to be typed from a specific keyboard app. You know, for security.