Honestly if you send this to someone you disagree with you just come across as the biggest tool ever.
Honestly if you send this to someone you disagree with you just come across as the biggest tool ever.
Brendan Eich founded Brave after being booted from Mozilla over his opposition to same-sex marriage.
Shame about the crypto bs and homophobia though.
It doesn’t help that there’s basically no documentation for how to use the Gecko engine either.
The engine is where like 95% of the complexity lies though. Maybe more.
In this case having more browser engines not under Google’s control is probably a good thing. Although this effort might’ve been better spent working on Servo.
You don’t really get the personal touch there though.
I think it’s most likely pressure from payment processors.
In what way is it less effort than vim? I’ve tried helix a little bit and it didn’t seem that different.
I know I’m being somewhat pedantic but range() returns an iterable range
type, not a list, in python 3.
list.append
returns None
so what you’ve actually got is a list comprehension that generates a list containing the value None
19 times. (using functions with side effects, such as list.append
, in list comprehensions are generally bad style so you should avoid this)list[...]
syntax retrieves elements from the list, which is not what you’re trying to do here. (and it is actually invalid syntax in this case)list
, because list is already a builtin.If you want to append the numbers 1 to 19 to a list as you’re trying to do you can call the list.extend
function with the list comprehension [
as the argument. (Although in this case you can also just use the range directly.) To do it without list comprehensions you can simply loop over the range and repeatedly call the append function. ]
I think they weren’t asking for an idea that would actually make the world a better place but rather one that somebody on some level believes would make the world a better place. Hence it still being a stupid idea.
It’s not a paper, it’s a stream-of-consciousness style blog post.
Ah yes, newsweek. Truly a paragon of human rights advocacy.
Pretty sure 5 is Artemis Fowl.
Nah, I just saw two people arguing in a group chat once and felt an immediate need to block the one that sent that image.