AUR. If it doesn’t exist on AUR (very unlikely, but happens sometimes), I make a package for it.
On non-arch distros, I often use LURE.
I fuck numbers.
AUR. If it doesn’t exist on AUR (very unlikely, but happens sometimes), I make a package for it.
On non-arch distros, I often use LURE.
Right in front of me is a guy editing a >10 page LaTeX file in Overleaf on a 13 inch laptop. The sidebar takes like 1/3rd of the screen. The editor in around 3 inches in width, and he needs to zoom into the PDF preview to read it.
My point in, some people simply don’t care about anything.
I prefer Office 365 online.
I do use Ventoy, but a more “traditional” alternative that I like is Popsicle. Super lightweight, and works very well. Some cases do require a dedicated USB, where Ventoy won’t work, at least not without trickery (e.g. anything with persistent storage).
I haven’t really done much recursion in Python, but can’t we do a tail-recursive version so that it (almost) never reaches recursion depth issues?
You’re pretty much right on the money. In Haskell, a String
is a type synonym for [
, so we can use the list concatenation function ]++
to join strings. ++
is an infix function i.e. [3,4,5] = [1,2,3,3,4,5]
(which will be equivalent to doing ] ++ [(++) [1,2,3] [3,4,5]
by virtue of how infix functions work in Haskell). When we do (++ "a")
, we create a partially applied function. Now, we can supply another string to it and it will add "a"
at the end of it.
iterate f x
produces a lazily evaluated sequence [
. So, to get the nth entry, we can do ]wine !! n
where we use another infix function !!
. With partial application, we can modify the definition of wine
to create a function that takes an Int
n and spits out the nth entry of it by doing
wine = (!!) $ iterate (++" Is Not an Emulator") "WINE"
We needed to wrap the !!
inside parentheses because it’s an infix function. just changes the order of application. (IIRC, it’s the least significant function.) You can think that we’re wrapping whatever’s on the right of the
by parentheses. Now we can do
wine 2
instead of wine !! 2
to get "WINE Is Not an Emulator Is Not an Emulator"
.
I’m by no means a Haskell expert. (I’m not even a professional programmer lol.) So, if someone would like to add some more details, they’re more than welcome.
Edit: A much more readable version might be
wine 0 = "WINE"
wine n = wine (n-1) ++ " Is Not an Emulator"
Sorry, I should’ve specified, it’s in Haskell. Idk where you tried running it.
wine = iterate (++" Is Not an Emulator") "WINE"
I’ve been using Gallery for PhotoPrism for a while now and it’s pretty solid.
It’s a choice. We know that it’s riskier to use stuff from AUR. Which is why it’s highly recommended to read the PKGBUILD before installing the package. The basic Arch install doesn’t even include an AUR helper. That said, AUR is typically very reliable for packages with a decent userbase. It’s mostly due to the community aspect. Bad actors are caught relatively easily as the PKGBUILD is available to look at.
I dislike both. But since Google Docs is free, it’s easier to use everywhere and with all kinds of groups.
No, it’s powered by Tensorflow, not an LLM. It’s the useful side of AI, basically, also it’s locally hosted. In case you don’t like it, you can disable it. It’s still a great app.
I’ve been using exclusively Linux since high school, and now I’m doing a PhD in math. It’s always been pretty smooth. I used to have a separate Windows rig for gaming, but don’t really need it anymore, now that Proton works very well with most games. (I don’t really play AAA games, so that helps.)
Coming to the point, for academic stuff, I mostly needed to use a PDF reader (Zathura and qPdfView), LaTeX, and some computation and graphing software (mostly SageMath). I sometimes needed to use DOCX files, but LibreOffice works well for that. Most other software I need from time to time are usually Linux native.
Also, many universities provide access to O365. I’ve used it in some rare cases where I needed to provide input in some collaborative document. But in most cases, I was able to convince my friends/colleagues to use Google Docs instead.
Unless you do CAD, or some creative work, Linux should be perfect for your usecase.
There’s also PhotoPrism.
Individual philanthropy is never a solution. Most of the breakthroughs happen by public funding. Tax the rich, and fund the research. Don’t let the MFs claim they’re helping anyone out by donating 1% of their stolen wealth.
Lol. Hope you found something else to enjoy with the tea.
Nicco Loves Linux made a pretty interesting video on him a month-ish ago. You might enjoy it if you’ve known Lunduke since when he was still nice.
Edit: Link to the video
Yeah, I don’t get it.
Yesterday I was annoyed by SplitWise. We had a small trip over the weekend and were adding expenses to it, and it turns out that there’s now a limit to how many entries you can put in per day. Even with ads. So we decided to find another platform, and a friend suggested another closed product which is probably gonna get as shitty as SplitWise soon. Anyway, I was able to convince them to use Spliit instead. If the hosted service goes to shit, at least I can self host it and keep all the data.
I only use my own installer scripts with LURE, so I’m not sure about the safety of the publicly available repos. But the project itself seems to be pretty solid and reliable.