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15 results for “crmsnbleyd”
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thank you @tudor for two prs to flexoki-emacs-theme! They are also the first PRs to be merged since the move to codeberg.
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@crmsnbleyd
Right, some German dialects (like Frankonian here at my place) lack 'voiceless plosives' and replace them with 'unaspirated, partially voiced plosives'.Hence: 'Gadse' instead of 'Katze'.
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@crmsnbleyd #PureScript and a web framework like #Concur
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@[email protected] thank you for having a solution without #xargs. it's a terrible program and there is always a way to avoid it that's more idiomatic to bash. /hj
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@[email protected] thank you for having a solution without #xargs. it's a terrible program and there is always a way to avoid it that's more idiomatic to bash. /hj
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@[email protected] thank you for having a solution without #xargs. it's a terrible program and there is always a way to avoid it that's more idiomatic to bash. /hj
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Thanks Firefox, this is really cute
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I used to run a communist instagram meme page at the age of 16
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Indian people where do you buy craft coffee from
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question:
I read this article which has a nice high level overview of how goroutines actually work, and TLDR; the runtime and compiler handle a lot of stuff to deal with network calls and moving goroutines from threads that are blocked for syscalls
The reasoning the author gives is that event loop makes you deal with callback functions but you can just sugar that into Promises so is there any real point to all of this?
https://dave.cheney.net/2015/08/08/performance-without-the-event-loop
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question:
I read this article which has a nice high level overview of how goroutines actually work, and TLDR; the runtime and compiler handle a lot of stuff to deal with network calls and moving goroutines from threads that are blocked for syscalls
The reasoning the author gives is that event loop makes you deal with callback functions but you can just sugar that into Promises so is there any real point to all of this?
https://dave.cheney.net/2015/08/08/performance-without-the-event-loop
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question:
I read this article which has a nice high level overview of how goroutines actually work, and TLDR; the runtime and compiler handle a lot of stuff to deal with network calls and moving goroutines from threads that are blocked for syscalls
The reasoning the author gives is that event loop makes you deal with callback functions but you can just sugar that into Promises so is there any real point to all of this?
https://dave.cheney.net/2015/08/08/performance-without-the-event-loop
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question:
I read this article which has a nice high level overview of how goroutines actually work, and TLDR; the runtime and compiler handle a lot of stuff to deal with network calls and moving goroutines from threads that are blocked for syscalls
The reasoning the author gives is that event loop makes you deal with callback functions but you can just sugar that into Promises so is there any real point to all of this?
https://dave.cheney.net/2015/08/08/performance-without-the-event-loop
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question:
I read this article which has a nice high level overview of how goroutines actually work, and TLDR; the runtime and compiler handle a lot of stuff to deal with network calls and moving goroutines from threads that are blocked for syscalls
The reasoning the author gives is that event loop makes you deal with callback functions but you can just sugar that into Promises so is there any real point to all of this?
https://dave.cheney.net/2015/08/08/performance-without-the-event-loop
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Hey y'all, I'm Drew from India, I'm currently a DevOps Engineer at infoworks.io and have been made redundant starting from next month.
I've had a lot of experience working with CI/CD pipelines and IaC at ${currentJob}, but would love doing development in any programming language/framework you could imagine also.
If it endears myself to any of you, I use Emacs with vi keybindings wherever I can.
I'm willing to work remotely in any time zone, or any place in India.