@Ffisegydd Probably not - but if they're going to try to "security audit" - I'd say that's an "attack" - with records we can show they've considered to DoS SO in the past... they don't deserve an account
@aliteralmind just a quick note, this: python django-admin.py startproject mysite isnt supposed to work. Once you call python, the next argument will not use your PATH. Only the very first command is relative to your PATH.
@GlassGhost I saw your comment and was going to reply, but decided it too long ago. Thanks. I actually wasn't concerned about security - I was remarking on the UX. It assured me they'd "walk me through" the process, and then all it did was say "do it" (and help pages contained info on errors only). Thanks though.
In computer programming, lint was the name originally given to a particular program that flagged some suspicious and non-portable constructs (likely to be bugs) in C language source code. The term is now applied generically to tools that flag suspicious usage in software written in any computer language. The term lint-like behavior is sometimes applied to the process of flagging suspicious language usage. Lint-like tools generally perform static analysis of source code.
Lint as a term can also refer more broadly to syntactic discrepancies in general, especially in interpreted languages like...
Atom isn't very much different than sublime, really, just a few of the smaller details are a little more... right. Like when you create a new file you can name it right away
Usually the first thing I'm thinking about when I create a new file is not what it contains, but what it is. That, and, before I give it a name (extension), there's no highlighting..
After using it only very briefly, I have found myself annoyed at repetitive actions in subl (or any visual) or just generally not being able to manipulate text like in 'normal' mode.
But then when I use vim, I'm not good enough that it doesn't annoy me for other reasons - I find it jarringly fast. It disrupts my train of thought because I get one thing done so much quicker than I'm used to, that my next process isn't yet in my brain's ready buffer.
And then I'm too busy thinking about how quick that was to be thinking about anything else, and by that point I've completely forgotten what was going to come after def foo():
you see, I tried Atom, just for curiosity, but 1) you cannot compare the smoothness of ST to Atom -- the latter is just awful in that 2) I hate copy-cats, especially when it is a cheap-copy not a quality one
well I mean, it's not great for if you're reading something in detail, but if you have an example up of something you want to do and don't want to constantly refer back to it
@Humdinger I used to hate on OS X so bad, but I've always like the hardware. I gave in, couldn't find a solid alternative to Macbook Air, used it to TeamViewer into Win8 for a while, OS X kinda grew on me
(You can download a .dmg to run on OS X from any site)
That's fair enough I guess. Always makes me laugh when non-power-users say something like "Why don't you have an iPhone - wouldn't it work better with your Mac?"
Linux is great, but in some cases I find it's customisability a drawback - like because it's so much so, noone's bothered to think too hard about what the most useful default is, since everyone can just go ahead and configure it themselves. I seem to end up spending more time configuring than seems like should be necessary
@OllieFord Ya thats a good point. I have built my own "default" linux system VM image for whenever I want to start over because I know it will take me about a day or two to set it all up again
However, Ubuntu has somewhat done this with their separation of ubuntu server and what not
I've noticed some people push config etc files to their github (obviously not just for linux stuff, but it reminded me) - seems like a neat idea, easily access your usual setup wherever you are
"woah this isn't behaving like it usually does.. damn which option did I change that changed that... git pull ..."
I'm fine, thanks. I want to write my first project with someone else in python and now I'm confused about virtual enviroments thing. Should I just upload my virtual env to git repository or just tell my friend to do his own virtual env?