satay-sauce
I’ve been on the internet since 1996 or so, and this is the first mention (in English) of Satay. Amazing.
Satay with some mayo is nice as well.
satay-sauce
I’ve been on the internet since 1996 or so, and this is the first mention (in English) of Satay. Amazing.
Satay with some mayo is nice as well.
Some good kebab helps too, probably due to the fat and salt, but water over kebab, if you have to choose.
As well as the release date for 3.13! 2024-10-01
Neocities is now, old man!
that guy who took increasingly elaborate pictures of himself taking the previous picture of his camera
This one: https://old.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/cmwov/hey_reddit_what_tattoos_do_you_have/c0tpyls/
Make sure to click [+][deleted] 14 years ago (156 children)
to get even more.
I remember Reddit helping to make a kid do his homework.
People kept complaining about “karma farmers”
I remember the “Reddit is just you, me and /u/karmanaut” meme from 2008. He was the original “karma farmer”. It was a problem since the early days due to how they setup Reddit as a system. It just enforced his behaviour.
And lack of trailing comma’s
Someone’s working on a standard! https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-rivest-sexp/
and no possibility of (a lack of) trailing comma’s. Unless you use JSON inside Yaml, you heathens!
Depends on the data structure. If you want to save a table of sorts, you’re getting a bunch of unreadable [[[]]] nonsense.
For flat structures it’s great though.
That lack of trailing comma has been the bane of my existence.
People are working on making S-Expressions a standard: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-rivest-sexp/
Note: This is just a draft, but improvements have been happening since 2023.
I probably won’t like the parentheses, but I think I’ll take it over yaml/json/whateverelse.
YAML is fine if you use a subset (don’t use the advanced features - not like you know those anyway) and use explicit strings (always add "
to strings), otherwise things may be cast when you did not intend values to be cast.
Example:
country: NO
(Norway) will be cast to country: False
, because it’ll cast no
(regardless from casing) to false
, and yes
to true
.
country: "NO"
should not be cast.
The prosecutor argued that the murder of Shepard was premeditated and driven by greed
McKinney’s girlfriend told police that he had been motivated by anti-gay sentiment but later recanted her statement, saying that she had lied because she thought it would help him.
Price said she had lied to police about McKinney having been provoked by an unwanted sexual advance from Shepard, telling TV journalist Elizabeth Vargas, “I don’t think it was a hate crime at all.”[9][37] Rerucha said, “It was a murder that was once again driven by drugs.”[9]
Doesn’t seem to be a hatecrime. Just a crime against someone that happened to be gay.
Alas it’s not my site (and I think it’s meant to be read on a desktop screen), so I can’t fix it.
For the newbies: RFC 3339 vs ISO 8601. Bookmark this site.
YAML is complex and has security concerns most people are not aware of.
YAML is racist to Norwegians.
If you have something like country: NO
(NO = Norway), YAML will turn that into country: False
. Why? Implicit casting. There are a bunch of truthy strings that’ll be cast automagically.
Downvoted for paywalled medium article. That being said: I have no idea how I would use Python differently without the GIL, but I’m glad we’re getting the option!
screen
is liketmux
, right? So you can split your CLI, open a new window/tab to open more Bash/Vim instances?