Why not just use python as a calculator then?
Why not just use python as a calculator then?
Is Python scripting working on version 3.0? For the life of me I can’t get that to work on version 2 (whichever version).
Write a ticket, mentioning “tackle TODOs” 😅
Hey man you’re human! Mistakes! Everyone makes them! At least you admit it, right :D
Eh, what’s a dcp?
What eldritch beast was summoned as a result?
My go to hack was quickly running a python http server and connect to it. I can’t remember what the command was exactly. Something like python -m http.server
or so, then connect to the ip from my phone, heh.
Yelling at my laptop
Because it’s a statically compiled binary, it tends to grow the size of the binary. Increases portability though.
Yeah true. But Catherine said it perfectly at the end. Something like “you still don’t get it? What did you expect?”. The fact that one of his consciousness remains down in the abyss was kind of frightening. All by himself.
That ending screwed with my mind. Existential horror at it’s finest!
Wow I forgot I once made a DragonBall Z skin for winamp. It’s still there :D Blast from the past!!
Take this advice, especially if you are just starting with Linux. You can also install it in a VM if you are still running Windows, to get a feeling of different desktop environments (Gnome, xfce, KDE, etc) before choosing.
This is extremely helpful!! The filters are arcane and it really helped me out with something :D
Mike Ross Erveeces = microservices :)
Fish shell has this built-in with Ctrl+R :)
Helix looks promising. It’s kind of learning curvish because I have to unlearn vim. Trying to do more things in it though, bit by bit (no pun intended)
I just wished Joplin would store notes as some kind of plain text, like Obsidian does. I’ve also been trying out AppFlowy, which looks kinda promising (and Foss), but it stores notes in a db as well.
Fair enough, but Python is not that hard, especially for simple calculations. Start up the repl and type away!
from math import * x = sin(12) + pi * 3.2 y = tan(x) y # prints 0.09200389785419612