they/them
No, it means people can contribute issues and pull requests to projects on other servers. Repositories would only be created on the server your account is on if I’m not mistaken. I believe it uses activitypub internally, so should work the same as Lemmy/mastodon.
My cat is currently sitting on an identical pillow :)
It can be pretty complicated without a phone. Especially if your computer doesn’t have a webcam.
I think the important part is that the syntax will become standardised, rather than being defined by microsoft/typescript, potentially allowing for alternative implementations. It could also make the build step optional in some cases, which is something people dislike about typescript currently.
I used waydroid for whatsapp, though any android emulator will probably work. To create the account, there was an option to verify a phone number by sending a text message (to a dumb phone with a burner sim card in my case). I use whatsapp web to read and send messages, and only have to open waydroid every few months to sign-in again.
Huh interesting. In Scotland we had another one: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haggis_(programming_language)
My version also seems to be 1.3.2. When I select (*.pdf) from the export panel, it lets me select all the pages at once, which results in a single PDF.
I can import and export multi-page PDFs into inkskape just fine. No need to do each page individually.
Blurry pictures of cats was one of my favourite subreddits on reddit. I’m glad to see it already exists on Lemmy: !blurrypicturesofcats@lemmy.world
Hmm. I had it pop up for the first time in ages today, but updating filters and clearing cookies did the trick.
I think it’s just normal Lua code.
Here’s a quick json converter (based on https://stackoverflow.com/a/55575074), assuming you have lua installed:
local function to_json(obj)
local result = {}
for key, value in pairs(obj) do
if type(value) == "string" then
value = string.format("\"%s\"", value)
elseif type(value) == "table" then
value = to_json(value)
end
table.insert(result, string.format("\"%s\":%s", key, value))
end
return "{" .. table.concat(result, ",") .. "}"
end
function item(obj)
print(to_json(obj))
end
dofile(arg[1])
It just defines the item
function to print json, and executes the data file.
arg[1]
, the first command line argument, is the path to the data file:
$ lua to_json.lua path/to/datafile.list
and pipe the output to something.json
or whatever else you want to do.
I think the second part of the comment is what’s important:
If you are in a more comfortable environment you will be better at working
Maybe that is windows for you. I have barely ever used windows, so the concept of searching for installers online and running them just seems clunky and time consuming to me. It’s just not what I’m used to.
However if you are willing to learn multiple systems, you might find that one is better than the others.
I learned programming at about 12, by following tutorials for the Pygame python library. It doesn’t do anything especially fancy, but it taught me many concepts, while I had a lot of fun. My first project was making the traditional snake game, which I think is a good level of complexity.
[…] drones will carry items to Graemsay and Hoy where postal staff will complete their delivery routes.
Graemsay gets 2-5 ferries a day (assuming the passenger ferry can take mail), Hoy gets the same ferry, plus 3-6 a day at the other end of the island.
This feels similar to this experiment on North Ronaldsay, which already has 3 flights a day, which can deliver the mail. I think Carla (in the video) puts it well - there is the odd occasion where the mail has to be left till the next flight, due to the plane being overweight.
(Also, I don’t see how this new trial is more of a “service” than the North Ronaldsay one, so the headline is kind of incorrect. Also, “Orkney has become the first location in the UK to have mail delivered by drone.” is a complete lie, even thought they link the other article right below it.)
I’d be more interested seeing the delivery vans replaced with smaller electric vehicles. Usually when I get my mail delivered, it seems that the passenger seat is large enough to store most people’s deliveries.
Yeah, the Orkney Islands are also experimenting with tidal generators (Wikipedia/European Marine Energy Centre), though the weather there is ideal for wind energy.
What’s wrong with forms?