It doesn’t help that there’s basically no documentation for how to use the Gecko engine either.
It doesn’t help that there’s basically no documentation for how to use the Gecko engine either.
The engine is where like 95% of the complexity lies though. Maybe more.
In this case having more browser engines not under Google’s control is probably a good thing. Although this effort might’ve been better spent working on Servo.
I know I’m being somewhat pedantic but range() returns an iterable range
type, not a list, in python 3.
list.append
returns None
so what you’ve actually got is a list comprehension that generates a list containing the value None
19 times. (using functions with side effects, such as list.append
, in list comprehensions are generally bad style so you should avoid this)list[...]
syntax retrieves elements from the list, which is not what you’re trying to do here. (and it is actually invalid syntax in this case)list
, because list is already a builtin.If you want to append the numbers 1 to 19 to a list as you’re trying to do you can call the list.extend
function with the list comprehension [
as the argument. (Although in this case you can also just use the range directly.) To do it without list comprehensions you can simply loop over the range and repeatedly call the append function. ]
It’s not a paper, it’s a stream-of-consciousness style blog post.
Probably because they’re trying to apply DnD alignments to real life, which isn’t really any better than black and white morality.
I think that may have been in reference to using AWS, not corretto specifically.
In most cases they could probably switch to OpenJDK without losing anything whatsoever.
Yeah, and it’s extremely janky.
You can also use & to get &.
Edit: Fuck, I meant &
Edit 2: &
Okay nevermind, either lemmy or sync resolves html entities recursively apparently.
Edit 3: &
Start?
Encryption at rest is meaningless if you get infected with spyware.
Removed by mod
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
My favorite anecdote about Stallman is how some women at MIT kept massive amounts of plants in their office to ward him off.
Turn back now!