![](https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/85b43408-a5bc-4bf0-b3d0-0ea2713319ad.png)
![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/d3d059e3-fa3d-45af-ac93-ac894beba378.png)
Now that’s the kind of industry secrets I opened this thread for.
Same person as @Gobbel2000@feddit.de, different instance.
Now that’s the kind of industry secrets I opened this thread for.
A major political agenda of Vim is to support children in Uganda. A message about that is displayed whenever you open Vim’s start page. Bram Moolenaar insisted on users donating to the ICCF charity instead of to him, making Vim a very political editor in my view.
This statement is wrong.
THE MORE YOU SAVE
That’s wrong, it calculates the surface distance not the distance through the earth, while claiming otherwise. From the geopy.distance.great_circle
documentation:
Use spherical geometry to calculate the surface distance between points.
This would be a correct calculation, using the formula for the chord length from here:
from math import *
# Coordinates for Atlanta, West Georgia
atlanta_coords = (33.7490, -84.3880)
# Coordinates for Tbilisi, Georgia
tbilisi_coords = (41.7151, 44.8271)
# Convert from degrees to radians
phi = (radians(atlanta_coords[0]), radians(tbilisi_coords[0]))
lambd = (radians(atlanta_coords[1]), radians(tbilisi_coords[1]))
# Spherical law of cosines
central_angle = acos(sin(phi[0]) * sin(phi[1]) + cos(phi[0]) * cos(phi[1]) * cos(lambd[1] - lambd[0]))
chord_length = 2 * sin(central_angle/2)
earth_radius = 6335.439 #km
print(f"Tunnel length: {chord_length * earth_radius:.3f}km")
A straight tunnel from Atlanta to Tbilisi would be 9060.898km long.
Ever since I’ve understood that it accepts objectively wrong answers as long as it somehow seems as if you gave it some thought, I’ve made sure to hinder the accuracy of models that try to use my data.
Very experimental, not just with microtonality but making the singers do noises that few composers dared to put into their music.
Huh? Hexagonal Architecture?
While there certainly is some overlap, Python is a scripting language and not a shell language. Some tasks that involve calling lots of different programs and juggling input and output streams are much easier done in bash than in Python.
I won’t argue with you that bash is janky and easily insecure, but what shell language do you think should replace bash?
Jon Gjengset on Youtube is doing live coding where he uses neovim quite well. And you’ll learn about Rust while you’re at it.
I (luckily) haven’t had much experience using autotools, but I do suppose it was no coincidence that the injection was initiated there. I really like the comparison that was made in the post of the Meson maintainer you linked:
Several “undefeatable” fortresses have been taken over by attackers entering via sewage pipes.
Wow, Lemmy is feeling quite gullible today.