

I also like watching Doctor Who, how did you manage to make a cute dalek? :d
I also like watching Doctor Who, how did you manage to make a cute dalek? :d
I stumbled over Gradience just yesterday but I tought it was archived sometime last year, is it still working accordingly?
Unfortunately not :/ But I do have rainbow-gradient window borders.
I suppose you’re mainly concerned about LibAdwaita-Apps?
I was surprised to learn that
Thanks a lot for the recommendation, I did enjoy the read!
I was wondering about encryption (is this what you’re talking about?) because these algorithms change so frequently I’d be surprised if they had anything back then considered ‘secure’ by now.
@Mothra@mander.xyz @Slein4273@feddit.org @mvirts@lemmy.world
Sorry for the tags, but otherwise I would have had to respond to all your comments individually.
I also wanted to read on, so I searched for the book and found a page where it was possible to ‘read a preview’
You can use backreferences \1 \2
etc. but you can also give them names explicitly.
it looks like this: (?<name>inner-regex)
Some flavors support it, kotlins doesn’t apparently.
I don’t actually know whether POSIX grep would support named groups :o
You can, another comment mentioned that. Only, I didn’t mean to spread misinformation because I haven’t used anything else in years.
I feel this, I like to see my wallpaper
I was amazed to find out you can open a new tab by using middle-click in firefox.
Fair point. My browser (FF) supports ‘search in tabs’ as well and suggest it over a new search engine result when typed in the address bar. I don’t know what about the style makes me think this, but it looks like FF on Windows in the Screenshot.
Love seeing a GNOME rice, I tried some GNOME ricing on a Fedora myself, however I was unable to get any further than installing Extensions ‘Just Perfection’ to hide some elements or using ‘Burn my Windows’, which I loved.
What did you use to style your GNOME-Shell Components?
I think this is what they are referring to: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broughton_Suspension_Bridge.
TL;DR: The bridge collapsed because soldiers marching on it created force they hadn’t anticipated, soldiers breaking step supposedly don’t have as much of an impact.