That would be wrong in every technical sense. You’re saying that .first()
would skip the 0th item.
First = leftmost.
That would be wrong in every technical sense. You’re saying that .first()
would skip the 0th item.
First = leftmost.
Because you can look it up.
This is funny. I exhaled slightly faster.
Don’t you use a formatter that fixes whitespace in sloppy writing?
Neofetch has always been stupid and slow
I’d like to add my opinion that git is definitely not the worst offender
I was let go once when I answered.
What were the limitations they overcame with BitNet, and what are some unresolved issues mentioned in the reprint?
I sniffed and smirked in agreement and joy of camaraderie.
You😆are🤓🤣wrong🤬😡! 💯💯👁️🍑👁️
Not a good first impression (other comments have my thoughts covered) and I think I’ll stick with Firefox.
Unless they impress us by re-writing it in a quality-first language, and make all configuration declarative, and drop support for some cruft. They’re going to have to try something bold and different to impress me, otherwise, this seems like more of the same, and an uphill battle at that.
Actually it wasn’t easy, they rely on a third party service that charges the customer instead of Tidal footing that bill for you. I thought that was a bit tacky.
This is the only acceptable answer
I have a search bar and no menu.
I tested my microwave with various volumes of water, took temperature readings, and developed a mental model. 450ml of water takes 5:45s to get to 193±1°F.
For sure. This is why I keep my phone plugged in on a stand, usually in do not disturb with only a clock when it is locked. It is, indeed, a clock.
That’s a leap.
I guess we can watch for network activity when we save and export images.
There’s another way to think about it which I actually use. Look in the empty bin and say “zero”, then move an apple and say “one”.