No, no, you have to delete your git config. That’s part of the challenge.
I’m also back on 60 Hz on my 160 Hz monitor because of this challenge. So cute though.
No, no, you have to delete your git config. That’s part of the challenge.
I’m also back on 60 Hz on my 160 Hz monitor because of this challenge. So cute though.
+1 for Cherrytree, I can even recommend it on Linux. The tree structure makes it so much better to sort things than OneNote with the limited depth.
Finally we will know what happened between Empire and Wednesday.
But your answer could be interpreted as “a FOSS OS can never maintained for a big variety of hardware over a long life cycle” which would be totally wrong. Android’s driver situation might be shit but that has nothing to do with an “open system” vs a “closed system”. My knowledge regarding this topic is not deep enough to give a perfect answer but I think other posts here sound more plausible.
There is something off with your reply. GNU/Linux exists and works fine with different kind of hardware while being FOSS.
Bye, see ya in 2 weeks
By some people’s standards, every game is an RPG today
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Do you really want to use the website, if you really need an extension because of that bullshit?
This. Tried both kbin and a lemmy instance and although the kbin experience at the beginning of the week was shit (slow and no federation) there was still more new content on then Frontpage than on lemmy (or I was using it wrong).
I want to add that you should consider that your teacher is teaching you fundamentals of programming. break and continue are often options to use, but you shouldn’t try to solve everything with them. You are probably writing pretty basic functions in class right now where it doesn’t really matter, but with more complex problems break and continue constructions might easily get pretty messy.
Also your teacher has a plan what to teach you over the whole semester. If recursion is part of this plan it’s valid she wants you to understand the basics of calling functions first. This might be overkill for easy problems but it could help you to be a better programmer in the future.