Ummm... Rust is a language, not JS library. It could be placed in the same category as C++ or C performance-wise.
Do your research, you certainly misunderstood something here.
If you have this kind of problem, this is the solution you need.
Git actually has a built-in command to do a binary search called git bisect. You give it a known bad commit and a known good commit, and it will check out the one halfway between and ask you if it's good or bad. You test it, tell git what it is, and then it checks out another commit. Repeat until it narrows it down to the commit that introduced the bug.
Which OVA do you mean? AniDB only has an OVA listed for Accel World: SAO relationship graph.
Although there two TV specials, so those might be that.
Anyway, from what little I've seen of German dubbed anime when one of my siblings watched it, from weird language choice uses ("Ich bin Gowther Goat Sin, die Ziegensünde!", seriously? Stick to one language at least) to weird VA decisions (Ao no Exorcist's Shiemi being voiced by one of the most emotionless VAs I've ever heard), it's just embarassing.
they're both reflective by underlying git invocations.
typically people call it a pull request because before the fancy web ui's you'd do this https://git-scm.com/docs/git-request-pull
The difference between a pull and a merge is that you need to fetch before a merge, a pull combines the two steps.
gitlab is probably more technically correct in naming it that, because the code has already been pushed to it, so it's doing a merge operation on it's end. It wasn't really originally envisioned to work like that before these web-ui's came into existence, you'd be expected to be hosting your own local git repo and asking well specifically the linux kernel developers to go out and pull your changes from the url you yourself are hosting them on.
Yep! They just added their own package manager winget. Imo this all seems to be in preparation for a new version of windows. But releasing all the features early to the people who want them is nice.
Except nano does have a configuration file. You can use it to rebind keys, enable syntax highlighting, enable mouse support, and set other nice features. Nano is more powerful than most of us give it credit for.
Though perhaps not as much as something like Vim, nano is surprisingly powerful. A quick read through its documentation will reveal a lot of hidden features, including mouse support.
If you want to help Stanford university sciencey big-brain types crunch data and (eventually) find a vaccine, plus other cool prizes (for humanity <- and that includes you (probably/possibly)):
https://foldingathome.org/ follow that link and get folding @ home.
It's like the SETI program but for science and it's easier to set up.
I use Sublime Merge for my day to day work. Advantages for me are:
And most importantly:
Not to mention I can have all of this with different tabs for each repository I might be working on.
The SDK comes with tools to transpile Dart to JS, and also compile it to a self contained binary!
Make a hello.dart
file like the one below.
void main() {
print('Hello, Dart!');
}
Then run the compiler.
dart2js -o hello.js hello.dart
This'll create a hello.js file which can be executed by node.
node hello.js
The above will print "Hello, Dart!" in the console.
However you can also compile it to an executable.
dart2native hello.dart
This will create a hello.exe
file. You can execute it directly.
./hello.exe
And even if someone doesn't have the Dart SDK on their machine, it'll run!
imo micro is the best editor. It runs in the terminal, has mouse and X clipboard support, it does syntax highlighting, it's expandable, It has a built-in terminal emulator, it can have multiple cursors, and with a plugin it can format code
[link](https;//micro-editor.github.io)