Agreed. Happy to see people posting.
Agreed. Happy to see people posting.
Have you only had grocery store tomatoes? If so, then I forgive you. But a good garden tomato is a taste of heaven.
I would call and see if there’s a way to turn off automatic management.
Not at all. If you know a bit about networking, you can log into the modem/router and set whatever you like.
Seems like there’s a bunch of Sapiens books. Which book and which chapters were you thinking of?
Looks like someone has a case of the Mondays.
Good. I hope they have nightmares about people.
A language reference (a manual). It’s not a language feature.
Ah. I’ve always heard of them as chainmail scrubbers.
Thanks for passing this along. I’ve been wondering what the next steps would be.
You might want to be more specific. When I googled “cast iron scrubber” a lot of different products came up.
I had to do a project once with JavaScript. I did not enjoy the experience. In my opinion, a language where you need a reference to tell true from false is a bad language. So maybe JavaScript is the JavaScript of languages.
I found this useful. Thanks.
I don’t mind neovim comments here. But you should know there’s a large neovim community as well.
It’s not too hard to create your own vim help. I named mine myhelp. So I can type :myhelp and see all the commands I can never seem to memorize.
I have never used Vim in the manner you show in the Vim example. I use ex commands seldom — usually when I need to make mass changes to a file. You are really doing things the hard way if you use an ex command to add a semicolon at the end of a line.
It’s tasty.