I’m pretty sure chatgpt caught mistakes like these for me recently and in the past. Just always slap in all your code into the prompt and tell it what you want the code to do step by step. Like with rubber ducky debugging.
I’m pretty sure chatgpt caught mistakes like these for me recently and in the past. Just always slap in all your code into the prompt and tell it what you want the code to do step by step. Like with rubber ducky debugging.
Don’t worry, the world does not revolve around the US of A.
Nevermind, I just looked it up and it is chromium. I thought it wasn’t. My bad.
Depends on what yoy install I guess.
It only broke twice for me from updates during the 5 year period. 1. grub 2. openjdk
and the openjdk one simply didn’t update until I uninstalled the old one and reinstalled the new one.
I have been on arch professionally for ~5 years.
I am a GUI fan and I don’t like fucking around with the OS. In fact, I don’t even want to think about it at all.
So far it hardly required any maintenance (much less than Ubuntu, Windows or Mac, at least for my workflows).
And the only fucking around I did with it was the first two days setting everything up just the way I like.
To be fair, I already had extensive linux knowledge at the point of switching to arch - through ~4 years of constantly breaking my Debians and Ubuntus every couple of months.
Article: https://doi.org/10.1145/3591280
Supplementary archive: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7804200 (Badges: Artifacts Available, Artifacts Evaluated — Reusable)
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3925-9549, https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3803-7995, https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1348-8618
tldr:
In general I’d recommend the modern standard android. So just go by the official docs and guides with Kotlin and Android Studio. Thats is not only the most straightforward option in my opinion, but it is easier to ask for help in a discord or search the web. (contrary to what @aluminium suggested by going with older UI and java)
But tbh. it depends what you’re prior dev exp is like. You said you have no mobile dev exp, but what about desktop or web? If you feel at home with web frameworks, react native might be way easier for you. Heck, if you have experience with c# and windows gui dev, then blazor or microsoft maui etc.
I agree with @aluminium on the point of multiplatform frameworks being way more complex than native android. Only chose those if you get an advantage out of it like if you are either already familiar with the base concepts/languages or if you want to target multiple platforms.
Get ready everyone, here comes the
Embrace, extend, and extinguish
Thanks, I appreciate your effort a lot and I understand the usecase now!
These words mean nothing to me. That is why I specifically asked for a real world example. By that I mean something like a userstory.
You could start with:
“Imagine you are Frank Frankis and you have an office job. Your boss tells you to do […] . But […] would take a long time to do manually because […]. Frank uses m5 in the following way to folve the […] task.”
Followed by an example input, example command and example output that is a solution to the problem from the scenario.
Without that - I am too dumb to understand.
Thank you in advance.
I am too dumb for this. Can somebody give an example of how this could be used in a real world scenario?
To play, please identify yourself via one of these services: [GitHub] [Google] [Twitter] [Reddit]
Best I can do is [Gitea] [Proton] [Mastodon] [Lemmy]
Me waiting for all the C websites written in AngularC /s
https://forge-allura.apache.org/p/allura/wiki/Feature Comparison/
Thats why they don’t compare themselved against it
Ah my bad, I think you are right.
You have to log in.
I’ve been using it on Linux for over a year as a beta tester. It’s in the AUR.
I’ve been using it on Linux for over a year as a beta tester. It’s in the AUR.
There used to be a kickstarter project that wanted to create that, but as a physical clock on the wall.
It was supposed to able to show your daily activities. But the key aspect was a 24h clock and visual presentation of day and night times.
I forgot what it was called.
Edit: found it, it was the life-clock, but there is nearly no matetial online on it nowadays.
https://24hourtime.info/2013/02/24/the-life-clock-kickstarter-campaign/
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1410952956/24-hour-life-clock