This is inspired by A half-hour to learn Rust and Zig in 30 minutes.
Your first Go program as a classical "Hello World" is pretty simple:
First we create a workspace for our project:
This is inspired by A half-hour to learn Rust and Zig in 30 minutes.
Your first Go program as a classical "Hello World" is pretty simple:
First we create a workspace for our project:
The diff output is more specific:
[I]f a whole block of text is moved, then all of it, rather than just the beginning and end, is detected as changed.
>The algorithm described here avoids these difficulties. It detects differences that correspond very closely to our intuitive notion of difference.
CGFloat BNRTimeBlock (void (^block)(void)); |
Here are all the Ironsworn assets in Markdown format for those who read from a screen or prefer to keep their character information in a text document. I've included the 3 New Official-ish Assets created by Shawn Tomkin that aren't in the main Ironsworn PDF.
License:
This work is based on Ironsworn (found at www.ironswornrpg.com), created by Shawn Tomkin, and licensed for our use under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
Synchronized output is merely implementing the feature as inspired by iTerm2 synchronized output,
except that it's not using the rare DCS but rather the well known SM ?
and RM ?
. iTerm2 has now also adopted to use the new syntax instead of using DCS.
When rendering the screen of the terminal, the Emulator usually iterates through each visible grid cell and renders its current state. With applications updating the screen a at higher frequency this can cause tearing.
This mode attempts to mitigate that.
[ Update 2020-05-31: I won't be maintaining this page or responding to comments anymore (except for perhaps a few exceptional occasions). ]
Most of the terminal emulators auto-detect when a URL appears onscreen and allow to conveniently open them (e.g. via Ctrl+click or Cmd+click, or the right click menu).
It was, however, not possible until now for arbitrary text to point to URLs, just as on webpages.
Let's have some command-line fun with curl, [jq][1], and the [new GitHub Search API][2].
Today we're looking for: