That was a fantastic read. Highly recommend (despite old site)
That was a fantastic read. Highly recommend (despite old site)
realistic yet fantastical
So which is it then ?
The serious answer is to whatever your country’s internet regulation agency is (assuming your in the EU, else you’re out of luck). So for example, in France that would be the CNIL, in Germany it’s the BfDI, etc.
Yeah, my university’s intranet (and I believe also their homepage, but I’m not sure) has the same
It’s really a skill issue if replacing T
by [
in your regexp is hard ]
Yeah sure, I’ll admit defeat. Btw, weird flex for an Irishman to write a play in French…
One thing I like to do is to build on top of their lie. That way they can’t call you out without admitting they were lying
well you might want to look into vim’s built-in make
and compiler
commands for the compiling and LSPs for the coding.
Sir, may I interest you in the word of our Lord and Saviour Bram Moolenaar and his Vim text editor ?
Yes, do as I say
But then again, is it Linux’ fault that publishers refuse to make Linux versions of their games, requiring the users to use hacks to make windows executables work on Linux ?
He says, while using a command that brings a little convenience at the price of control and security…
Maybe the skull is shrieking and will shock your soul. One thing’s for sure tho, it will seal your doom tonight
Especially since they didn’t invent the fried potato. The French did. They invented cutting the potato in sticks instead of disks to fry them…
Quick note, just to be a pedantic arsehole: conjugation is specific to verbs. The general term is declension, which includes conjugation, but more broadly refers to the changing of a word depending on its semantical context
I too am at a loss as to where the meme is
Yeah, I actually mixed it up with du (and I also mixed up cardinal and multiple prefixes). So to correct, in Latin it should be: simcaprio, bicaprio, tercaprio, quatercaprio etc…
Except di is Latin. Greek would be bi. So for one it would be uni, three would be tri.
Yeah this has me lost too