If you don’t mind using a different system GURPS has a free 32 page lite version of the system that gives you all the basics
If you don’t mind using a different system GURPS has a free 32 page lite version of the system that gives you all the basics
Many years ago now I was told that we needed a way to turn a series of lights on and off for a custom bit of hardware. The hardware ran a Unix-like system so I decided that a daemon would be a good fit for the use case. I do not know what has become of my daemon of light but I do know whomever uses it must call the “summon” function to daemonize the process
They have an especially great selection for cheese. The only place I can find reasonably priced Brie and Camembert
Moth mode should be a required feature in every web browser
Keep putting points into “inland empire” until you start understanding
Now feed it nonstop terrywads
This should have been an option in Kerbal Space Program, the kerbals totally would have done this
It happens in Star Trek online kind of
I remember playing minecraft classic in a java applet from a post on jayisgames.com, later I saw one of my friends playing it and I was angry that they took away the ability to just instantly click and place/remove blocks. The day that they re-added creative mode was the best.
From what I heard one component was that it was difficult to line up the release dates between updating the Ubuntu base and KDE because Ubuntu uses GNOME and they line up their release dates with that
As a Unix weirdo I grok you
If you don’t want to install Linux, You should install plan9
Probably a floating point rounding error
I think a Joe Rogan is a kind of coffee based hair product for presidents, or maybe it’s leaders of the Soviet Union? can’t remember
2026 in the prime timeline, but who knows which one we are in now
In 90s soft shell tacos were < $1, its wild how expensive fast food / junk food it getting
MLVWM is a classic mac window manager for X11
https://github.com/morgant/mlvwm
Also you will need
https://github.com/morgant/mlvwmrc
Also bonus: Mac OS 8 startup for Plymouth
It’s DS9 S4E19 : Hard Time
It kinda depends on what games you are using.
If they are online only with anti cheat dual booting is the only viable solution because most anti cheat’s that don’t work with Linux/proton will flag you as cheating if you try to use a vm.
If its some older game its prolly better to use a vm for that OS, lien a lot of old games for windows XP or windows 95 are like that. For really old ones you can just use dosbox which is very tried and true.
If it’s just some random game that doesn’t work I either A: figure it will get working in some way eventually or B: give up on ever playing it again.
I think I’m at the point where if a new game comes out and it didn’t work on Linux I just wouldn’t buy it. But I might be an outlier since most of the games I like usually get a Linux port or will work with proton anyways
The header file was not originally made for the purpose it is used for today. In previous languages (like Fortran or COBOL) they had a preprocessor which was used for defining constants and macros and the like. The preprocessor is like a glorified cut and paste machine, it can’t do any complex processing by itself. (In fact the C preprocessor is not even Turing complete although it is close)
The reason why the headers are included at the top is also for historical reasons. In single pass compilers a file is read line by line and parsed into an Abstract Syntax Tree; the function has to be declared before it can be used but sometimes it may be declared in a different file or later in the file. So it’s convenient to put that information in the header.
Many modern languages use compilers that take multiple passes to generate the code. They will also use internal databases for the objects and their prototypes like a v-table to store data about the program to do optimizations and the like.
Languages like rust, zig, and go use modules where they have namespaces where specific definitions of code are declared and able to be used later. They also had a series of built in tools like dynamically managing dependencies, linking, etc.
For most languages they also have a Foreign Function Interface which allows them to call functions written in a different languages (like C shared libraries). All of the managers you mentioned have great FFI functionality and work well with C shared libraries. You can often use C header files in these since they give the function prototype without needing to read the whole source code and find all those definitions (often if the library is proprietary you will only have access to the shared library and the header files).