The company didn’t abandon, Microsoft bought them out indirectly and killed the competition. Nothing to see here.
The company didn’t abandon, Microsoft bought them out indirectly and killed the competition. Nothing to see here.
ANTLR is for writing parsers. You don’t need a new custom parser, just use an existing XML parser.
There are IDE extensions that show the diff of the entire PR locally without having to squash anything. So yes, it’s weird to reinvent a square wheel.
I am currently writing a C compiler, with my own backend (and hopefully, frontend) in OCaml.
But why write your own C frontend? It’s much more of a pain than people imagine. I maintain a C frontend implemented in OCaml (the project itself goes back 25 years) and it’s still not on par with GCC or Clang.
For any other language, sure, but C has so many “wonderful” features, starting with the lexer hack. Your grammar conveniently overlooks this issue but it’s something you’ll have to deal with to actually implement it. So it simply won’t be as nice as theory suggests.
Yes, but with things like syscalls it’s easier to do this than require every high-level thing building on the syscall to be modified and recompiled. Very few people need to use such low-level APIs.
Isn’t that just drafts for that comment’s reply?
Because I just saved a comment draft, went looking at something else and wanted to go back. The problem was that I couldn’t find the right post/comment where I saved the draft.
I thought Boost saved that because going to reply to the same comment would automatically bring up the draft.
This is the crucial detail that everyone is missing.
It’s the same as with the Linux kernel GitHub mirror.
I might be the minority who was affected by this but how they handled the physical goodies last year was the last straw for me. Unlike all the spammy contributions that rush to it, I didn’t rush creating some pointless PRs on the first day or whatever. My last PR finished its embargo period a few days before the end of October. They even sent out a congratulations email, but when I clicked the link and went to the website there wasn’t anything there. Only when I checked their discord, I saw others with the same confusion and someone semi-officially saying they might’ve run out. It’s obvious they didn’t even ever consider running out and had no system in place to handle that.
Other than that, some of the rules they introduced in recent years were also so detrimental to meaningful PRs even though they thought it’d motivate that, instead of spammy PRs. Clearly that didn’t work at all and actually had the opposite effect in some cases. It was a lot easier to get spammy PRs counted than meaningful ones.
I could rant in more detail about the latter if you’re interested, but I’ll refrain right now.
Hacktoberfest.
I still do both (and did before), but now just don’t bother with Hacktoberfest.
Nice that someone’s happy about it. As a long time open source contributor and maintainer, I gave up this year because it’s gone downhill.
Yeah, titlegore material.
So it has the intended effect.
Transactions aren’t backups. You can just as easily commit before fully realizing it. Backups, backups, backups.
I’m really curious what this patented security application is if the Android API already provided it.
I thought that might already be true but luckily not. It also has arcs.
It’s your project, do whatever you want.
If changing any observable behavior meant a breaking change, then you couldn’t ever change anything. Even a bug fix changes observable behavior. Some people don’t seem to be considering that here…
Yes, that’s where it’s name comes from!
That was fast.