… the only language where 90% of the world’s memory safety vulnerabilities have occurred in the last 50 years
Yeah… That’s a shit post alright.
I’m not a C developer myself, but that’s just a low blow. Also, uncited ;).
… the only language where 90% of the world’s memory safety vulnerabilities have occurred in the last 50 years
Yeah… That’s a shit post alright.
I’m not a C developer myself, but that’s just a low blow. Also, uncited ;).
I’m going to try to help explain this, but i’ll be honest it feels like you’re coming from a place of frustration. I’m sorry about that, take a break :)
(I’m not a language expert, but here goes)
var test int < bruh what? :=
These are the two forms of variable declaration and the second one is a declaration and initialization short hand. I most commonly use :=
. For instance:
foo := 1 // it's an int!
var bar uint16 // variable will be assigned the zero value for unit16 which is unsurprisingly, 0.
func(u User) hi () { … } Where is the return type and why calling this fct doesnt require passing the u parameter but rather u.hi().
This has no return type because it returns no values. It does not require passing u
. It’s a method on the User type, specifically u User
is a method receiver. You might think of this akin to self
or this
variable in other languages. By convention it is a singke character of the type’s name.
If that function returned a value it might look like:
func(u User) hi() string {
return "hi!"
}
map := map[string] int {} < wtf
This is confusing because of how it’s written. But the intent is to have a map (aka dictionary or hashmap) with string
keys and int
values. In your example it’s initializd to have no entries, the {}
. Let me rewrite this a different way:
ages := map[string]int{
"Alice": 38,
"Bob": 37,
}
Hope this helps. In all honesty, Go’s language is very simple and actually rather clear. There’s definitely some funny bits, but these aren’t it. Take a break, come back to it later. It’s hard to learn if you are frustrated.
I also recommend doing the Tour of Go here. My engineers who found Go intimidating found it very accessible and helped them get through the learning code (as there is with any language).
Good luck (I’m on mobile and didn’t check my syntax, hopefully my code works 😎)
Oh ffs. 🤯
D’oh. I missed that! 😔
Except Google Pay had the ability to send money to/from friends and bill splitting. Wallet has no such features at all. And nothing they’ve published or any news on it seems to mention this. (Which has left me somewhat confused that I’m missing something. But as best as I can tell, I’m not)
But however will it determine the player one controller … on a desktop computer?
Thank you for the correction and details.
I dunno if you noticed or if that was the joke. But you said “8 megs” three times in your comment when I think you meant to say “8 gigs”. 1 gigabyte ~ 1024 megabytes. Just wanted to let you know in case it wasn’t a joke about how 8 wasn’t enough. That’s all, thank you!
Nope. Many are plugged in and it will keep the seat and water warm. It further warms the seat when it detects someone is sitting on it. Kinda depends on budget, features, manufacturers.
NGL, middle of the night visits are still a bit jarring because the heating logic tries to conserve energy at night so it tends to me room temperature. But whatevs.
Honestly, worth it. Absolutely no regrets other than maybe not spending more 😂. At a couple hundred dollar Costco Toto model, it was already a risky purchase that at the time I simply wasn’t sure about. But yeah, it’s awesome 😎.
A bot I’m very pleased to see! Very cool.
Yep!
It’s generally gotten better in the last twenty years it used to be real bad on the early Internet. Very rarely nowadays I’ll run into a backend or frontend that won’t accept it.
Source: turned ten a couple days ago.
I have two words for you, “compensating controls.”
It’s like goddamn magic.
Is it bad my third thought after “🥰” and “unrequited love 😢” was immediately “oh gods I hope it doesn’t start marking the porch”?
Virtualization in general? Sure, I can. I’ve tried it a bit with bhyve. But it’s definitely a lot heavier since I’m now running a full Linux os and dedicating resources to it to run docker just to run a python or node app.
Learning the project is in Go though is a sigh of relief. Professionally I’ve moved to Go (from Python) just because it’s so damn easy to build and distribute.
I just wish there was better support for the other *nix’s. While the language support them just fine, docker on the other hand strangles it. =(
For me it’s more like new interesting self hosted project and then find out it’s only distributed as a docker container without any proper packaging. As someone who runs FreeBSD, this is a frustration I’ve run into with quite a number of projects.
From my understanding, transcode quality is a concern. I’ve unfortunately read AMD’s implementation just isn’t very good. That one is better off going Intel particularly from the last few years.
Jellyfin’s docs specifically talk about the issue.
Intel’s transcoding is also faster in the same generation.
Been debating which way to go for my next rebuild as I’m over due myself.
My gods. I think this just gave me flashbacks to this week.
I was recently battling node’s import/require shenanigans trying to figure out how to import a typescript module in my basic program. I feel this so hard.
I walked away utterly hating the language and its ecosystem. Utterly defeated, I gave up.
Okay, so I’m not the only one that has found this a problem. The first few times I didn’t realize it. But it started dawning on me, it’s really quite bad at finding local businesses.
I agree with this.
Even people who make mistakes should be entitled to vote. Even while paying for their mistakes frankly. They may have lost their freedom, but they are still citizens of the Republic.
The only compelling argument I know of is that voting in local elections is a mess because there would be counties that’d suffer from the over representation due to the location of the prisons. I would just consider those to be absentee voters myself, and they just keep the last address they had before going in or next if kin instead.
Just my thoughts
Quite literally my first thought. Great, but I can’t issue certs against that.
One of the major reasons I have a domain name is so that I can issue certs that just work against any and all devices. For resources on my network. Home or work, some thing.
To folks recommending a private CA, that’s a quick way to some serious frustration. For some arguably good reasons. On some devices I could easily add a CA to, others are annoying or downright bullshit, and yet others are pretty much impossible. Then that last set that’s the most persnickety, guests, where it’d be downright rude!
Being able to issue public certs is easily is great! I don’t use .local much because if it’s worth naming, it’s worth securing.