Makes a lot of sense - it’s a GET with the body from POST (I know, there’s more to it than that). Definitely cleaner than encoding a huge URL or query string.
However, we’re still implementing IPv6, so how long until we could actually use this?
New account since lemmyrs.org went down, other @Deebster
s are available.
Makes a lot of sense - it’s a GET with the body from POST (I know, there’s more to it than that). Definitely cleaner than encoding a huge URL or query string.
However, we’re still implementing IPv6, so how long until we could actually use this?
Token-based string distances looks like exactly what I need for my current side project - I’m using Levenshtein but I should be comparing based on words, not characters.
I just need to figure out which (if any) of these does what I need.
Edit: looks like the Python version has that information: https://github.com/life4/textdistance?tab=readme-ov-file#algorithms
How did you find Leptos to work with? I never got further than the tutorial so I have yet to form a real opinion on it.
It’s a subtle difference between that and path::exists()
.
path::exists()
== false
might just mean you can’t use it (if path::exists() cannot access a file due to e.g. permissions, it’ll return false)fs::exists()
== Ok(false)
means it’s definitely not there (permissions error will cause an Err to be returned)I like that idea of using the different fonts for e.g. Copilot suggestions - reminds me of reading Asterix comics as a kid when they’d use gothic black for the Goth’s speech, etc.
edit: e.g.
The results are so close it seems like they’d be within the error bars.
I’m of the belief that spawning threads on demand is an anti-pattern; threads should spawn on program startup, and sleep until they have work to do.
Hmm, I need to think on this to decide whether I agree. What’s your reasoning for this opinion? Is it just based on lower latency, or is it more of an architectural/correctness thing?
I know of it because Helix uses it, and it works really well.
Sorry, I was just joking; it’s clearly a typo and I don’t think anyone misunderstood (or maybe even noticed).
unvaluable
You’ve edited this post and left this in (or added it!?) so I suppose you mean it!
Apparently UK universities need to teach how directories work to first year Computer Science students. They’ve grown up with polished, closed devices and many only know apps and the basics of using the internet.
I thought this was going to be a version of the penguin of doom copypasta.
I hadn’t heard of it, but it looks like it wouldn’t have much use outside of stalking or doxing.
We’re soon going to have to update the old emacs jokes to reference Neovim.
The problem with stats like these are that Firefox users (and the browser’s defaults) block a lot of the scripts and images used for tracking.
Cloudflare’s stats show higher Firefox usage (4.737% for 2023 Q3), although that’s still less than even Edge. My own logs show more still, although my visitors are more technical than usual.
“is in good health”? I was looking for autocorrect typos but can’t figure out anything likely, unless they’re not using querty.
Federation like that sounds perfect, and would definitely help out for the current situation I see where projects are officially on, say, Gitlab but still accept pull requests on GitHub. I’m sure that involves some annoying manual process (although should be less hassle than the code review!)
btw, if you put double spaces at the end of a line, it makes a new line without a new paragraph:
It’s not DNS
There’s no way it’s DNS
It was DNS
I’ve used some of their components in a little helper program that was scraping some stats from a service without an API, so Servo code will end up in plenty of projects besides Firefox (and Tauri). Good news for all of us.
What about proxies and the like? It might be less relevant in a world where most communication happens under TLS.