DD.MM.YYYY is superior for everyday use
Please elaborate. Can't see how this could be true in any situation but I'm willing to hear you out xd
DD.MM.YYYY is superior for everyday use
Please elaborate. Can't see how this could be true in any situation but I'm willing to hear you out xd
Why was painting bad for you?
Wait here are you getting a $10/year VPS?
Writing the code itself is very similar to using an IDE: with very little config effort, you have stuff like autocomplete, syntax highlighting, LSP errors, function signature hints, 'jump to definition', git integration, etc. Moving around is just a matter of building up the muscle memory. Finding things across the codebase is also easy with tools like fzf and Ag.
Like IDE users often do, executing and building the code can be done through the command line.
More complex operations like refactoring are where IDEs have neovim beaten by a mile. Although I haven't spent time researching it, I don't know if it's possible to have that kind of advanced functionality within neovim.
With recent AI tools (a lot of which, at the end of the day, are CLI tools), the delta between neovim and a full IDE has shrunk further because (for better or worse, probably for worse) people are doing less of the actual coding.
I just hope trackmania survives
I know more than one person (I think 4, including me) who code for a living and essentially live in tmux.
Ye i just saw a vid on ecco. Wishlisting fs
IIT: lots of wisdom
Is your hobby guitar lol i'm curious
This is so cool!
I know someone who traveled a good chunk of North America by land (~3000 miles). I thought that was crazy enough already but your trip was not only more than twice the length, but crossed wildly different countries and was done pre-smartphones.
How did you figure out the logistics? How did you know it would actually be possible?

is this the new one? It has the angry headlights lmao
Ok I'll give it to yall, MM-DD-YYYY can be good in some situations. DD-MM-YYYY is still sus tho.