No, I won’t stop buying meat, it’s delicious.
No, I won’t stop buying meat, it’s delicious.
And the store pays the supplier, the supplier pays the farm, and everything in between. Not sure if you’re being serious.
Yeah, by everyone that buys meat. It’s simple. If we all stop buying it now they’re gonna run out and stop producing meat. The meat you buy today pays the meat that enters the store later.
No it doesn’t. But money does allow them to keep going…
On the other hand, if you buy something, check what you’re buying. Don’t complain if you don’t even know what you’re buying.
And with wat money? Your money and everyone else’s that buys meat. Not that it matters though, I’ll keep eating my meat.
Debian does use systemd, but what’s so bad about it? I’m just curious, I’m using Arch with KDE, and that also uses systemd. Never had any issues with it. Debian doesn’t use snap by default though.
It’s a great distro to learn a lot about Linux. I challenged myself to install it on my Surface Go 2, and make it usable as a tablet, as well as make it boot with secure boot and more. Now it’s happily running Arch with KDE, using the linux-surface kernel signed with my own secure boot key and a pacman hook that signs that kernel after every update. I learned all of this acompanied by a lot of fuckups and reinstalls, until I was able to fix things after breaking them instead of starting from scratch.
I hope they’ll ever fix the backspace issue for the on screen keyboard.
My bad, I looked over the returns. If you return something there wouldn’t be much difference between both.
That could also be the case.
Not neccessarily wrong, but you could also check the first bit. If it’s 1 the number is uneven, if it’s 0 the number is even. That seems to be more efficient.
It will check all of the if statements instead of stopping at the first match.
If you don’t use a semicolon directly in MySQL it won’t do anything until you add it.