PowerSeries@lemmy.catoLinux@lemmy.ml•[Content Warning: Transphobia] From the very same people who tell us to "boycott Wayland"English
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11 months agoCareful you don't come off as a sealion.
Though this is a thread about Wayland so eh.
Careful you don't come off as a sealion.
Though this is a thread about Wayland so eh.
I want it, but I'm just using the ms ergo which has a bit of a gap, but not as much as a full split.
Thanks, you made me feel old today. Get off my lawn.
I've watched some slow typists program, and I think I have the answer. If it takes you a while to type the code out, you are much more likely to stick to the first approach that works, and not rewrite it as much.
Uh you're not going to believe this, but the parents volunteered the boys.
Have you looked at the Lisps / Scheme / Racket yet? Racket in particular makes it quite nice to go
#lang blah
at the top of the file and change the parsing or interpretation entirely.For example all the documentation pages and guides are written in scribble:
https://docs.racket-lang.org/scribble/getting-started.html#(part._first-example)
#lang scribble/base @title{On the Cookie-Eating Habits of Mice} If you give a mouse a cookie, he's going to ask for a glass of milk.
And it has an entire document markup language created in it, which can output pdf or html. But you can still use @ syntax to drop in racket code to compute values. Or create templates.
I even implemented a #lang which took assembly directly (and interpreted it, it was for a class).
So if you are really after full control, you should study Lisps and their macro systems.