Doesn’t need any comment:
int getCount() { return count; }
Absolutely needs a very extensive comment:
double getBojangleFlux { return fubar * .42; }
Doesn’t need any comment:
int getCount() { return count; }
Absolutely needs a very extensive comment:
double getBojangleFlux { return fubar * .42; }
It had a wonderfully bizarre name: fsn
The funny thing about that quote is that it really was a Unix system that was shown on screen.
It’s now been 18 years since the last time an employer paid me to write assembly, but it’s only been a year or so since the last time I had to read assembly at work (in order to verify what the compiler really was doing).
He’s a politician in the United States.
I still don’t get what would be so difficult about typing one such character if ever needed.
Sure, but when was the last time you saw, say, a Python project using some third-party library instead of simply calling isnumeric() from the standard library?
There’s a reason for these jokes always being about Javascript.
Most people never type a full file name on the command line, they normally just use file name completion.
And if they happen to have a lot of files that are only distinguished by some single character, what would be so difficult about typing that one character then?
Because you would need to know the code for å in all kb layouts, on all OS’s,
WTF!? Why would you ever need to know that!?
No, it isn’t. Why would it be?
Incompetence didn’t go anywhere.
Now that’s certainly true, but the beauty of open source software is that we can fix bugs when we encounter them.
We have Unicode these days: blåhaj
We have Unicode these days: blåhaj
Would it be possible to work around this by using virtual desktops? 🤔
Montenegro, you’re thinking of Montenegro.
I would really want to have a really good open source SFTP (SSH File Transfer Protocol) app, with good secure key management and excellent transfer performance. So far, I haven’t found any such app.
Only if it’s installed somewhere beneath the current working directory, whichever that might be when running the command.