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:
Install VMWare Workstation PRO 17 (Read it right. PRO!) | |
Also, these keys might also work with VMWare Fusion 13 PRO. Just tested it. | |
Sub to me on youtube pls - PurpleVibe32 | |
if you want more keys - call my bot on telegram. @purector_bot (THE BOT WONT REPLY ANYMORE) - Or: https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1040615179894935645/1074016373228978277/keys.zip - the password in the zip is 102me. | |
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This gist can get off at any time. | |
PLEASE, DONT COPY THIS. IF YOU FORK IT, DONT EDIT IT. | |
*If you have a problem comment and people will try to help you! | |
*No virus |
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 https://fasterthanli.me/blog/2020/a-half-hour-to-learn-rust/
the command zig run my_code.zig
will compile and immediately run your Zig
program. Each of these cells contains a zig program that you can try to run
(some of them contain compile-time errors that you can comment out to play
with)
// 3D Dom viewer, copy-paste this into your console to visualise the DOM as a stack of solid blocks. | |
// You can also minify and save it as a bookmarklet (https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/what-are-bookmarklets/) | |
(() => { | |
const SHOW_SIDES = false; // color sides of DOM nodes? | |
const COLOR_SURFACE = true; // color tops of DOM nodes? | |
const COLOR_RANDOM = false; // randomise color? | |
const COLOR_HUE = 190; // hue in HSL (https://hslpicker.com) | |
const MAX_ROTATION = 180; // set to 360 to rotate all the way round | |
const THICKNESS = 20; // thickness of layers | |
const DISTANCE = 10000; // ¯\\_(ツ)_/¯ |
Want to inject some flavor into your everyday text chat? You're in luck! Discord uses Markdown, a simple plain text formatting system that'll help you make your sentences stand out. Here's how to do it! Just add a few characters before & after your desired text to change your text! I'll show you some examples...
What this guide covers:
// The MIT License(MIT) | |
// | |
// Copyright(c) 2022 NVIDIA CORPORATION & AFFILIATES. All rights reserved. | |
// | |
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of | |
// this software and associated documentation files(the "Software"), to deal in | |
// the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to | |
// use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and / or sell copies of | |
// the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, | |
// subject to the following conditions : |
I am working on adding support for building and distributing (via PyPI) Python Wheels with C Extensions to the Python wheel and pip packages. The discussion on Distutils-SIG continues, but I believe it is fairly certain that some effort to correctly identify Linux distributions will need to be made. I've begun efforts to add this support to wheel.
If you have a Linux distribution or version of a listed distribution not in this gist, or one of the ones I have not directly verified, I could use the following:
/etc/os-release
, if it exists! model | |
pc101 Generic 101-key PC | |
pc102 Generic 102-key (Intl) PC | |
pc104 Generic 104-key PC | |
pc105 Generic 105-key (Intl) PC | |
dell101 Dell 101-key PC | |
latitude Dell Latitude series laptop | |
dellm65 Dell Precision M65 | |
everex Everex STEPnote | |
flexpro Keytronic FlexPro |
I have a website now that includes a more dumbed down but straight forward version of this guide that isnt basied towards Arch Linux but considers most distros. https://linuxguidance.net/improve-battery-and-optimize-your-linux-laptop/
Everything I do in this guide is mostly taken from the Arch Wiki, and is for Arch Linux, obviously this can probably be applied to other Linux distributions especially Arch based ones, this guide is for people who want a laptop with similar effciency they had on Windows or MacOS. I hate the excuse of having to compromise on Linux to have good battery or thermals on laptops.
Please think of this guide as more of a starting point, if you're serious about fully optimizing your laptop research your laptop and the hardware inside of it as that can get you even further down the rabbit hole.
This guide assumes you have a relatively modern laptop with at least an SSD from the factory, if you don't, don't worry you can still probably follow this guide perfectly, if you have a 32-b