Any query can have zero or more pipe operators as a suffix, delin-
eated with the pipe character “|>”.
"delineated"? Looks like a typo of delimited?
Or is that a play on neat and delimited?
Any query can have zero or more pipe operators as a suffix, delin-
eated with the pipe character “|>”.
"delineated"? Looks like a typo of delimited?
Or is that a play on neat and delimited?
I find LINQ query syntax less readable than SQL. I like LINQ method syntax for simple, linear queries.
The linear method syntax is somewhat like the idea of piping SQL operations.
CTRL+ALT+<, SHIFT+<
🙃🤡
Oh, did I miss it? Was it recently?
The link in your screenshot links to #
. That's not a share-able languaged link. And I suspect all three have that same href?
The only semantically correct reason to link to #
is to jump to the top without JavaScript scroll functions.
Links with JavaScript functionality using a <a
with href
#
is a relatively common misuse.
English source code is a universal language.
I've never seen a need for localization beyond domain terminology. And I think it would be a huge detrimental.
To implement it would be unnecessary significant complexity. Effort better spent elsewhere. And for programmers it'd be confusing. Think code snippets, mixing content, and the need for reserved word expansion or exclusive parsing scopes that would be even more complex and confusing.
The current GitHub outage shows that most Git users just can’t live without a commercial entity stewarding their code though.
I don't see it. How does downtime show that?
Unfortunately, the language links are JavaScript links, not href/URL links, so I can't link them. I don't even see JS event handlers on the individual items. lol
Maybe that's the first "digital disability escape game" challenge? /s
Countries' environments may vary. I didn't have to go into debt for my Bachelors.
The post link goes to the news.
The GitHub repo has a link to the site https://orange-opensource.github.io/Tota11ylost/
top right has a language menu with English, Spanish, French
Seems like that's the full thing. Dunno what you mean by demo?
I asked 6 questions on StackOverflow. 3 in 2010 and 3 in 2011.
For context; I gave 183 answers.
I can agree with most questions having already been asked.
Moreso, most questions on StackOverflow can be answered with some context knowledge or some reading of official docs or references, or trying out. I've not felt the need to ask anything.