

Rust output is bad? I feel like it’s one of the best in terms of telling you where you got things wrong. Nix output when you accidentally get infinite recursion is so bad.
Come to think of it, Nix fits all three better than Rust.


Rust output is bad? I feel like it’s one of the best in terms of telling you where you got things wrong. Nix output when you accidentally get infinite recursion is so bad.
Come to think of it, Nix fits all three better than Rust.


Wait, what? Anime???
They really made my childhood game only to give it the most generic name possible huh
Does anyone know the name of the game that features that particular 4 coloured ball under “Anonymous” in the image? I remember that ball very well, but I can’t find the game.
Not many people like vibe-coding here, so you might see some hostility from them. Still, I don’t see it being that harmful when people use it for their own personal usage. Somewhat jealous that you seem to be able to get it working properly, I never see decent code out of it.
ikr, like as if any sane person would call lemmy or insta an image board, or put them in the same category as 4chan just because you can post image
“tomato is a fruit ☝️🤓” ass comments in this post, man


Yeah, it stops at first page on Boost for me, even though browsing via website works just fine.


() creates a subshell, and & runs the command in background. The $@ means everything after the first argument, so the <command> is executed like a normal command. I am not sure why this works, but it has worked more consistently than nohup, disown, and it’s a lot shorter than most other solutions.


IIRC disown is a shell built-in command, so its use is a bit limited. Not sure if & is also a built-in, but I found disown to not work in some situations. Besides, it’s shorter.


I have a script named d in my PATH and it contains this:
("$@" > /dev/null 2>&1 &)
It allows me to run any program in a fully detached state in a way that works even if the terminal that started the program closes, and it’s as simple as d <command>.


slopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslopslop

[-3, -1,
main@desktop:~/Projects/TimeoutSort$ _


I haven’t come across a single program that tells you what is blocking the ejection even in Linux. Sure, if you use the right tools you can find the culprit, but the program that does the ejection task seems to love being vague.


Title sounds sarcastic 😭


Yes, it makes them behave just like normal files. Internet connection is necessary unfortunately, and you can’t do the “edit now, upload later” kind of thing.


You can mount your OneDrive on your filesystem with rclone. Once mounted, it works just like a normal directory, except with some latency. You can mount it to multiple devices too.
https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_mount/
If you don’t like sharing your files to Microsoft in plaintext, you can also create encrypted remote within Microsoft remote. With both set up, files will appear in plaintext on your desktop’s filesystem, but will be encrypted on OneDrive.


In some countries you need it to make a phone call.


WAIT WHAT


we are devoted to our goals btw
Can you fix this by watching XVideos with inverted screen