But you won't be able to survive alone. What you need is a bunch of people you can trust. And then you can build your own sheltered community inside the prison.
javascript
function formValidator(){
// Make quick references to our fields
var title = document.getElementById('title');
var author = document.getElementById('author');
var firstname = document.getElementById('firstname');
var lastname = document.getElementById('lastname');
var areacode = ...
Hmm, "my Ex's mother thought LOL means Lots of Love.. one day she sent a sms to her daughter: Your grandma died, LOL." <- ye got that from internet Lol.
@EtiennedeMartel As if compiling was ever disk based?! If you can spend the majority of time linking or moving object modules around, something else is terribly wrong
@sehe Maybe, but tell me how it makes sense: same hardware, same project, compiling the engine for PS3 on XP: brings the whole system to a halt. On 7: you can at least work while doing it.
@EtiennedeMartel That's another matter. Most likely the responsiveness is due to better CPU/GPU? Anyways, the scheduler is likely to have been improved in favour of foreground tasks in desktop Windowses
@EtiennedeMartel Look at Linux for comparison, it's kernel has 2 or 3 MLOC, and it does a better job than Windows IMHO, so those code lines have to account for something somewhere.
@EtiennedeMartel I don't consider desktop and gaming to be exactly the same. Chrome OS could still provide hardware acceleration for games. Only the Windowing system happens to be different.
You can host them on whatever you like, that's not the point. I think they're annoying and they present some interesting security risks too. Which may be very hard to mitigate.
@Blank Awesome reply. You are absolutely right: vim is a programmer's editor, like the HP RPN calcs were back in the day.
Here's a breakdown: :'<,'> ("Ok, vim, let's do an Ex command (:) operating on the whole range from mark < up to and including > (which is the visual selection). Now the command is g/^/ (globally, for each line that has a start (^), a.k.a. just each line) execute t '> which means 'copy to the end of visual selection'.
@Blank The order of inserts happens to be favourable for our goal (otherwise, use '>+1). :t happens to be a synonym for :coppy saving us 1 character in the typing :)
@TonyTheLion I have 2 linux-only laptops, 1 linux only netbook, 1 android phone, 1 linux powered webserver, 1 linux powered fileserver/NAS powerhouse, 1 linux powered workstation (posting from it) and a bunch of VPS, which are most of the time deployed on linux.
You'll note how this is equally the desktop/workstation and laptops are all just as happy running linux as those pesky little servers.
@EtiennedeMartel Better in incremental building while maintaining ordering, yes.
@Mysticial What on earth would you still be using 32 bit linux for? I mean: 32bit windows, yes! Saves 10Gb of disk and ~0.5Gb of RAM on a bare install!
@sehe I initially installed it to keep binary compatibility with one of my class projects. Now I keep it to answer performance or compiler questions involving (32-bit) GCC.
@Blank When I started to see the beauty in the :commands I got a second vim productivity boost wave - Especially :g// and :v// - they're so damn powerful.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hey I have that too! I keep a windows VM which exclusively serves for me to try things out in MSVC
@sehe I am starting to see the power of vim. Initially I considered the vertical block selection useless, but it came rather handy while editing 8085 commands. I don't think any other editor can do that. ?
@Blank Many can. But not as rigorously composable with everything else as Vim. Or emacs. Or any trivially scripted/macroed editor, I guess
@Blank At least notepad++ and Visual Studio have had this for quite a while. In Visual studio, it is even quite easy to use (alt+mouse select)
Now that is immediately a weak point. I like to do <C-v>}ke to select vertically, to the end of the current block of lines (till whitespace) and selecting to the end of the word, e.g.
@Blank this is quite a contrived use-case, but I suppose it would have been hard for the OP to achieve this in any of the other editors mentioned. It also showcases a fair bit of ex commands:
First of all, get to know the features that make life easier for stuff like this in vim:
Visual block mode
blockwise-visual
blockwise operators
virtualedit; You can move the cursor to positions where there isn't any text. This is called "virtual space". The user guide has extensive samples ...
@R.MartinhoFernandes I started doing CapsLock more since I remapped the thing on Linux. Still hit Esc a lot though (on my work Pc, Gvim + ViEmu (VS2008) and VsVim (VS2010) still respond to Esc) /cc @Blank
That's not why I signed up of course. The main reason is because rdio have a browser app (so that I can listen at work) and the windows mobile app is way better than the one spotify got.