Do nothing without doing anything
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>edit-and-continue
works flawlessly for interpreted languages, for compiled languages it depends on the compiler and runtime whether it's supported. In general though, yeah no. that seems to be a VS/C# exclusive in the compiled language sector.
Eclipse does this with java so long as you don't change any method / class signatures.
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Yeah... I dunno though. Seems like there are so many great things you could put inside there. Why an orange?
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Add some fa_spin, and this would be @aliceif's desktop:
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This needed trying:
EDIT: Need to trim those lines a little...
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You people are absolutely horrid.
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I think we are starting to mess up this topic's rendering though, Firefox (or Discourse) starts timing out when Discoloading this topic.
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It's a new DDoS: Death by Emoji.
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Feel free to post it on ban.d. But I blame firefox on this one.
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Reminds me of the muppet show:
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/me is disappoint that there wasn't a or a hidden in there.
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Extra effort required.
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Why an orange?
because anger () is a substring of tangerine () and discourse emoji suggester was odd.
after that it became a bit of a meme, like
i'm sure i've explained this before though......
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Oh good. Another worthwhile thread that I now have to mute.
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Pascal syntax is not more widespread.
Is THAT what the expression evaluator is I'm using is using? I wondered why
variable := thevalue
was how it does assignment...
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@asdf said:
Pascal syntax is not more widespread.
Is THAT what the expression evaluator is I'm using is using? I wondered why
variable := thevalue
was how it does assignment...
It's ALGOL syntax. Pascal took it from ALGOL, which took it from basic mathematical notation.
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Do you have to type some arcane syntax to quit them?
Alt+F4 does what you'd expect in gvim. I don't remember configuring it to do that, but it was 15 years ago, so...
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Why is assignment even an expression in so many languages?
Would fixing that break anything important?
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Not enough resolution, 1920x1080 required.
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I guess it is so that this would not need a separate grammar:
a = b = c
Note I do not defend the "assignment is expression" it perhaps had seemed elegant at the time. Before compilers started spitting warning for it, I was bitten by it, and I guess any one writing C was too :) I was glad when Eclipse started giving me warning for it even before compilation, as well as forgotten
break
in theswitch
statement.
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Not enough resolution, 1920x1080 required.
what about tiling?
i'm sure you could get away with a 40x40 if you tiled it.
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Can anyone imagine trying to write code in Word, for example?
That might be pretty neat, actually. Think about it: under current programming paradigms, the only significant element is the arrangement of the character stream. But what if you could add meaning through formatting? You could even embed assets like pictures and spreadsheets right into the code, potentially simplifying asset management as well.
Someone get on this; Bold new vistas of programming await!
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Eclipse doesn't have an install process.
FTFY
Compared to VS, probably not. Compared to Vim though, almost certainly.
See above.
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Admittedly it's been a while since I used ViM, but I seem to recall it was a text editor only, and not a word processor. (ie. no support for text formatting, pagination, line spacing, paragraph indentation, etc. You know, the sort of detail work that's important for writing a story but irrelevant for coding.)
You can do LATEX in ViM.
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The point is the same.
Generally, yes. I was ing that particular aspect of it in relation to @RaceProUK's statement.
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ry would include extracting the zip file as the Eclipse install process, Shirley?
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ry would include extracting the zip file as the Eclipse install process, Shirley?
Eh, I'd say it counts as installing only as much as downloading a portable single-exe program counts as 'installing'.
Ain't no potato so fun as a jelly potato!
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Eh, I'd say it counts as installing only as much as
If we take anything between obtaining it and being able to run it as the install process, then if you download an exe and that exe is the application then there's no install process. If it's an installer or a zip then not so much because there's another action required.
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If we take anything between obtaining it and being able to run it as the install process, then if you download an exe and that exe is the application then there's no install process. If it's an installer or a zip then not so much because there's another action required.
One might consider the unzipping part of the obtaining, much like unboxing a delivery.
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Surely at that point,
sudo apt-get install vim
counts as an install process as well, making the point a tie?
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making the point a tie?
For installing the default out-of-the-box product, sure.
But out-of-the-box vim doesn't do the things I listed
@loopback0 said:with almost 0 minutes of messing around from the point it's installed and first run
I'm not having this discussion again.
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Ubuntu comes with vim.tiny pre-installed, so it's only a tie if you're installing vim-nox or vim-gtk or whatever.
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Bold new
https://www.microsoft.com/middleeast/gulf/launch2007/images/LoveLunch_TopBanner.jpgvistas
of programming await!
http://www.gadgetspage.com/wp-content/thewowstartsnow.jpg
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Let me know when you've got the God Walking Amongst Mere Mortals title like me, Ben. I'll wait.
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Why is assignment even an expression in so many languages?Would fixing that break anything important?
Lets you write this:
void strcpy(char* src, char* trg) { for(; *trg++ = *src++;); }
(Slightly more seriously there are some idioms involving while loops with assignment in the conditional)
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(Slightly more seriously there are some idioms involving while loops with assignment in the conditional)
while (fun = losing) dwarf_fortress();
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That might be pretty neat, actually. Think about it: under current programming paradigms, the only significant element is the arrangement of the character stream. But what if you could add meaning through formatting? You could even embed assets like pictures and spreadsheets right into the code, potentially simplifying asset management as well.
I'm sure I remember an article that described a whole code process which used different colors and formats to identify different things (comments) and how they used a complex macro system to actually convert it into compile-ready code.
I can't find it, though, so instead I'll leave this: