That’s my first thought, but my brain keeps trying to inject one immediately following “Surely.” No idea why.
I feel like there needs to be a comma somewhere in that sentence but I don’t know why…
Unfortunately this doesn’t seem to apply to publishers or developers that don’t have a landing page
Well, assuming you meant type specifier, at least not before C99. After that it is required. C23 explicitly states that a type specifier is required for all declarations.
If you actually meant type qualifier, then no. That was never required.
But also, sorting big endian automatically groups elements associated with common functions making search, completions, and snippets easier (if you use them). I’m torn
Well they did a fine enough job pissing off artist and artist aligned consumers. Now it’s just all the goofs from crypto happily peddling it like there’s no tomorrow.
It was never a flex, it was a cry for help
All these years and people still haven’t gotten the message:
You just reminded me of the Critic again damn it. https://piped.video/watch?v=6i7ycxiog40
“You’re not just wrong, you’re so far off I could make this the pivotal piece of a case study in misinterpreting humor”
God damn.
Link to the article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electricity_sector_in_Turkey#History
I’m sure Ubi would still let you purchase it through the online store regardless
Cross platform! You know, accessible across all our platforms
I’m not seeing this on Arch Linux right now so it may be a Deck specific regression
To do multi-user correctly it will take them rearchitecting a few things. Here’s what I’d image is currently required:
Most of the tools to do this are already present but it’ll take some time for someone to coordinate it and the fact that the product has made it this far without such a feature speaks to it’s demand. Hopefully someone takes a look at it though because it really shouldn’t be that bad.
The only place I’ve seen ruby used extensively is in environments with a lot of regular expressions and string manipulation. Still not entirely sure why I’ve only seen it used there. The regex tools in ruby are nice but they aren’t nice enough to justify a language switch in my opinion…
The above leans heavily on the idea that the political spectrum is a loop and swaying to either side too heavily incurs bias that eventually warps the initial intention
Because things weren’t already confusing enough
To be fair, C predates dependency hell. It was either there or it wasn’t. C++ has less of an excuse, but it was just object oriented concepts taped to C so it’s no surprise it was also missing dependency management.
Now with cmake, gnu-make, meson, gradel, and the world of metabuild systems that wrap those, nothing will change. It it does, it might as well kick start world war 3.