Whenever I open Nano basically all the commands it has are listed at the bottom, for small things it’s perfectly fine.
Whenever I open Nano basically all the commands it has are listed at the bottom, for small things it’s perfectly fine.
Modern C compilers have a lot of features you can use to check for example for memory errors. Rusts borrow-checker is much stricter as it’s designed to be part of the language, but for low-level code like the Linux kernel you’ll end up having to use Rust’s unsafe
feature on a lot of code to do things from talking to actual hardware to just implementing certain data structures and then Rust is about as good as C.
Lots of categories which Rust doesn’t prevent, and in the kernel you’ll end up with a lot of unsafe
Rust, so it can’t guarantee memory-safety in all cases.
Did everyone become stupid in the last 10 or so years? We used to write huge apps in Python without any type checkers or static analysis tools and never had any problems we wouldn’t have had in statically typed languages.
I see you like the first rule.
Wikipedia credits it to Ken Thompson, PDP-11 to me implies early Unix.
They prefer to be called Hobbits.
free after use
That would be perfectly safe in any language.
I threw some simple code at it and it even put unsafe
on the main function, what’s the point of Rust then if everything is unsafe
?
The successor to Deus Ex is Deus Ex. Mankind Divided was released in 2016, so it’s roughly as old as the other games you listed as successors to the other IPs.
Yeah, play the story and sidequests but don’t do any of the collectibles that are often necessary for 100%.
And the PS5 isn’t really flat design, especially compared to the current Xbox.
Nice, even moving the computer into the trash worked as expected.
Not really how this works. Tests take time and they don’t test immediately, also they do pool tests, so multiple samples are mixed and tested. So even if they’d find something they couldn’t tell you right there, and then again even if they could they would tell you it would be handled so that nobody else could notice.
Because your “auto-tagger” is a third party and you have to trust it to filter stuff correctly.
What? Do you mean that the shows would require prior knowledge of the source if the showrunners didn’t ignore it? Doubt it. I mean a book is a book and a game is a game and not a film or tv show, some changes are expected in the adaptation because it wouldn’t work otherwise. But there’s a difference to just ignoring stuff, can still make it low barrier for people who don’t know the source.
I’m not so sure about it being a safe bet. There have been a few good adaptations, but in general I’m very cautious and expect the worst because there has just been so much more garbage that completely ignored everything that made the games great.
In electronic music you often slightly detune the left and right of a synthesizer to make it sound “wide”, you can’t do that in mono and if you mix the stereo down to mono it sounds boring.