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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)LA
Posts
20
Comments
1,049
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I mean, I am not too concerned and it is your code. The if constexpr is just so much spiffier. You should do what's best for you.

    My own use case is that for pre-C++23 (and in particular, pre-C++20) workflows I'm looking to homogeneize the set of dependencies used to supplement the standard library and this looks like a great candidate lib. I already have my own expected, actually, but would rather someone else's who knows what they're doing. Since C++14 is the oldest standard I have to support directly for clients (big improvement: was C++03 before 2021) and it brought in the big changes that made constexpr actually usable, I treat C++14 as a a sorta "C++ LTS" in my codebase.

  • I feel that would be incredibly wasteful (and a browsing session can be several windows, too) for marginal zero or even negative net gain. Browsing would also need to set isolation profiles, because for some tabs, sites or windows you'd certainly want to have access to your localtime (plus it be precise enough). Ditto for each and every potential variable.

    The truth is, not everything needs to be containerized.

  • , pero como una es porfiada, me vine caminando de Tobalaba a la Muni de Vitacura.

    ¡Espero que hayas hecho valer la pena lo porfiada y hayas hecho ese trayecto tomando el tramo El Cerro - La Pirámide - Padre Hurtado! Si no no, a repetir.

    Por lo demás nanai, que se mejore.

  • That has always been my main criticism about wayland: it's actually vaporware.

    It's just a spec (and not even a complete one) that says "now, you go do our work and implement all this". So everyone has to go and do their own thing, which is the usual big corpo strategy to kill small corpo and/or FOSS. So I wonder why don't people see it. Pulseaudio, wayland, systemd, all came in at about the same time as the "microsoftism" infection in Linux development.

    From what I recall, for the first 5-or-so years there was not even a reference implementation (and I don't know if that is still the case, but do would expect it is).