I agree. Most custom ROMs already have such option.
Isn’t this a problem with every package/library system? Is there really a solution to this that doesn’t limit packages with how they handle their dependencies?
This may also be about trust. npm probably could limit a number of dependencies that a single package can have with an arbitrary limit, but they don’t do that, because they trust the developers they won’t misuse their options. Well…
Node packaging is fucked. Node packaging remains fucked.
I am sorry, but as a noobie user of npm I don’t understand. It works pretty well for me if you use it normally for what it is supposed for.
There are new solutions constantly developed such as PlayIntegrityNEXT. With some effort you can get rooted Android 14 device with custom ROM pass Play Integrity attestation.
So it was a lie to not lose potential sales
It’s sad, but only too tiny fraction of the phone buyers care about unlocking the bootloader for the company to be economically meaningful to care about.
It’s just a design system from Google: https://m3.material.io/
Thank you for your explanation! From what I have read ‘#pragma once’ solves the problem with mutiple includes for most modern compilers, but it’s always better to write the import guards for better compatability?
This is official from MiXplorer XDA thread.
MiXplorer gang rise up!
Where possible, maintain the right-click-view-source affordance. The beauty of the early web was that it was always possible to “peek behind the curtains”.
Just make the source code availible behind a visible link (hosted on Github or another similiar platform if possible). I don’t see this being a problem by any means.
- Rule - Prefer Naked HTML
HTML? Naked?? Man, I always did 😍.
- And if you DONT use that one, the extension store wont work
We have VSCodium and you can use a plethora of extensions with that one no problem.
Oh and an android TV version while you’re at it
It could hardly get better than SmartTubeNext.
FOSS! 🤤
Ouch! Thank you for noting.
A think that a lot of devs take “themed icons” as a gimmick feature on top and rather focus on app stability and other features, or they just don’t care because they don’t see it as a deal-breaker in any means.
And also FOSS is just cool. That’s a cherry on top.
You can download any visual studio code extension from the visual studio extensions marketplace as far as my experience goes. There’s a “download extension” link for every extension which will give you a *.vsix
file. Only pity is that you won’t get any automatic updates for the extension.
8 just took a look and the VS marketplace website on my mobile and look at what I have found under the “resources” section! This is same for every extension.
Change for the sake of change. At least it seems to be in a good direction.