I don’t know. Was he adopted?
I don’t know. Was he adopted?
An English couple adopted a German baby. By the age of two, he’d yet to talk.
They took him to specialists, but they could find nothing wrong with the boy.
By his seventh birthday, his parents had given up hope. But that morning while he ate breakfast, he spoke clearly: “Mother, Father, my strudel is a bit tepid.”
They were astounded and overjoyed. “You can talk!”
“Yes of course” said the boy.
“But why haven’t you said anything before?”
“Up to now everything has been quite satisfactory.”
Rust crates have the second and third problems.
Rust at least has type annotation.
The type has private fields. There’s no constructor. There’s no implementation of the From trait except on itself. You can’t find a function anywhere that returns the type.
I get it, but meanwhile people got to eat.
Even if it was just the top half, it’s still good advice.
Given the situation.
I guess I don’t know. Whenever something tempts me to R, I quickly find that Python’s got a good-enough solution.
Best scientific packages in the open source by far, a library for everything, everybody knows it. Works on all kinds of systems. Available by default in many OSs.
You might not like it, but you can’t leave.
Neither. If I’m not using the domain, I can pretend I still have it.
Has this guy never watched a movie? You always say “and the other one”.
It’s just easier to get old windows games running on Linux.
I’d love to see a poll on Trump voters for Harris vs. Hitler.
They finally got Sopwith.
Me: <starts a heredoc>
jetbrains: This heredoc goes on FOREVER!
Me: I’m going to close it…
jetbrains: <dies>
In an interview, Douglas Adams said after lengthy consideration John Cleese picked 42 as the least interesting number.
It’s right in front of you.
I thought it was 100% on their progress bars.