Yogthos is too busy posting propaganda to read anything else
Yogthos is too busy posting propaganda to read anything else
Boise, Idaho
What a fucking surprise
This is awesome work, I’m happy to see systemd on musl getting more attention. Poor Khem was doing it all by himself for years.
Baby Mammoth - Another Day at the Orifice
Garmin Instinct 2 does all of those things well, and has excellent battery life. I charge mine about every two weeks.
Google Home is the biggest piece of shit I’ve ever had the displeasure to use.
It used to work really well, and now it’s trash. I don’t know how they could fuck something up so badly.
You can not highlight text in a commit message and leave an in-line comment in the same way you can for code changes in the diff.
GitHub doesn’t let you comment on the commit message either. The only one I’ve seen do this properly this is Gerrit. And of course regular old mailing list reviews.
There are so many blogs and posts about writing good commit messages, using Conventional Commits, etc, and the two most popular forges don’t even let you comment in-line on the commit message during a review.
GitLab still doesn’t even support leaving comments on a commit message. Like, what? GitLab and GitHub have all these fancy shiny features but still suck at offering basic code review functionality.
I never understood the appeal.
I’m confused, the behavior you just said was “exactly the same in git” is now a problem for Mercurial?
Even when given the best and most sophisticated tools and equipment available, police will manage to fuck things up at every opportunity because they’re utterly incompetent.
Old, unreachable commits will be garbage collected.
Dude I mean in this in the most genuine, kind way: a significant aspect of being a successful programmer is using the tools in your environment. If you can’t do something without bringing in your Tool of Choice you’re artificially limiting yourself.
If your environment does not have a specific tool or functionality that you would prefer, you work around it. OpenWrt is an immensely capable OS and it manages to perform complex network operations within its (admittedly) constrained environment.
In this case you’re myopically focused on not even a specific language, but the language agnostic feature of regex capture groups. You should be asking yourself if there’s any other way to accomplish your goal without this (spoiler: there are probably dozens of alternatives)
Lua is 31 years old and has been included in OpenWrt by default for 15 years.
If it’s OpenWrt then use Lua. You probably could have written a solution in the time it took you to come whine about BusyBox.
God bless openwrt