wet containing moisture or volatile components
Water is wet. The fact that this is an argument is ridiculous.
wet containing moisture or volatile components
Water is wet. The fact that this is an argument is ridiculous.
Abandoned it? What?
Wait. They could before??? wtf
Geez that article is terribly written. But interesting nonetheless!
I have the Wii sports resort jam playing in my head constantly. Does that include part of the infinite knowledge of the universe???
https://open.spotify.com/track/095HPmkmBLYaQeKpbfrMWk?si=8IU8A778Q_ilvkAGLTVQXA
Not sure if that is a serious question, but it’s because formatting doesn’t depend on the type of variables but going to the definition of a field obviously depends on the type that the field is in.
formatting does depend on the type of variables. Go look at ktfmt’s codebase and come back after you’ve done so…
Maybe my example was not clear enough for you - I guess it’s possible you’ve never experienced working intellisense, so you don’t understand the feature I’m describing.
Lol, nice try with the insult there. I code in Kotlin, my intellisense works just fine. I just think you’re quite ignorant and have no clue what you’re actually talking about.
Ctrl-click on bar. Where does it jump to?
it gives you an option, just like if it was an interface. Did you actually try this out before commenting? Guessing not. And how often are you naming functions the exact same thing across two different classes without using an interface? And if you were using an interface intellisense would work the exact same way, giving you the option to jump to any of the implementations.
I’m sorry, but you clearly haven’t thought this out, or you’re really quite ignorant as to how intellisense works in all languages (including Ruby, and including statically typed languages).
It’s happening on lemmy too. People making posts in multiple subs saying that FF is super buggy, etc.
Reynolds wrap literally has this as a faq on their website because so many people think it.
Dispersed camping. We plan the day before we decide to go. A lot fewer people, dogs can be off leash, etc.
The shell corps don’t protect in this case
This is awesome. I bet it’s how my dog feels when I use the ball that’s made to bounce weird.
Just because it’s large doesn’t mean it’s functioning. Russia has a lot of roads, but functioning would be a strong word for what state they’re in.
By using the AST? Do you really not know how languages work? I mean seriously, this is incredibly basic stuff. You don’t need to know the type to jump to the ast node location. Do you think that formatters for dynamic languages need to know the type in order to format them properly? Then why in the world would you need it to know where to jump to in a type definition!?!
Edit: also in the case of Ruby, the entire thing runs on a VM which used to be YARV but I think might have changed recently. So there’s literally bytecode providing all the information needed to run it. I highly recommend reading a book about how the Ruby internals work since you seem to think you understand but it’s quite clear you don’t, or for some reason think “jump to” is this magical thing that requires types.
I’m guessing you aren’t a programmer or network engineer, because a relay does not necessitate storing anything. Your router does not “store” your webpages when you go to a page on the internet. Something like mulvad vpn doesn’t store anything when using it.
I mean he clearly just walks out of the water in the movies, he’s not suddenly coming up, like you clearly see him slowly get higher and higher out of the water as he gets closer to shore. Also the ocean isn’t that deep close to shore.
Overwhelmingly southern states. 🙄
Nighthawk in light shows how to make your own on YouTube. He has lots of videos about stuff like this. Someone else in the comments linked one of his vids.
So different thickness materials can actually cool you off just from a heat transfer perspective, completely ignoring the PCM capabilities (I didn’t click your link I’m just assuming it’s his latest vid). https://www.thermal-engineering.org/what-is-critical-thickness-of-insulation-critical-radius-definition/
So wearing a thin tshirt in cold weather for example can actually be colder than wearing no shirt at all. Same in reverse. I’m wondering if this material is doing that rather than being some sort of PCM.
Nice catch