@starball I'm tempted to flag it as NAA, they seem to be saying "I've built a VS Code extension to solve <explanation of problem>, find more details in my answer on another question". I don't know though whether there explanation is enough to be counted as an answer.
I have a question about my Stack Overflow post: If someone pings me in a comment; can I see which specific comment I was pinged in from the Global Inbox?
While questions/answers in the discussion space are by design not held to the same rigorous standard of regular SO posts, the ability to edit posts should still exist, as people still:
do errors when tagging a post,
make typos,
are not always that good at English, making a post hard to read with...
I recently was searching around to see if there had been any discussion on what I thought was a strange "feature" of django, and my DuckDuckGo query gave as the first result this question. It looked like perhaps it was related to my issue so I clicked through to it and after a couple of minutes r...
I'm using Puppeteer to generate PDFs from HTML content. It works perfectly on my local macOS machine, but when I deploy the same code to an AWS EC2 Linux instance, I encounter the following error:
Could not find Chrome (ver. 127.0.6533.72)
Here’s the code I'm using:
try {
const browser = awai...
As per Mark Rotteveel's suggestion, re-posting my responses here regarding my question. (See archived page, in case comments have been deleted.)
The reasons below also support why this question should be opened: If my answer to my question is not adequate, people will have a shot to give better o...
Given that discussions are made for more open-ended and subjective posts, should posts that don't fit SO be moved there?
Pros:
It would populate discussions with more question.
The asker and anyone searching for the question would get an answer (potentially) instead of a closed question.
Moderat...
which... is interesting because it's entirely useless for collectives, which was meant to be a sub-community system but has no tools for the community to be itself
I'm most annoyed that SE keep going "few people use this" and removing stuff. This time they didn't even announce it or mention it at all until prodded. It feels a lot like they are trying to get away with changing stuff and hoping the community wouldn't notice.
But even then, "few people use this" is a very bad justification. If you've set up your site to be consumed in certain way, then it's very bad form to just randomly change it. No notification no nothing. Sure, I don't use the RSS feeds on the popup. I use the ones on the pages with questions. That does still mean the feeds are useful. By reducing the amount of ways you can get there, SE are just trying to set up a "well, well remove all RSS feeds. Few people use them".
User Profiles used to (sometimes?) have some text below the reputation score, saying something like "Top 10% overall" or "Top 5% this year" to describe the user's reputation ranking or velocity. The text would seemingly choose a time window that makes the number look most "impressive". The text w...
Microsoft did one so astoundingly stupid move with Windows 11 that I apparently automatically erase it from my mind after every encounter. Clicking on the clock in the task bar does not open the calendar any more. If you click the clock on the main monitor then you get the notifications. Not something related to time. You also can expand a calendar at the bottom of the notifications but it's basically a hidden feature. Clicking the clock on a secondary monitor does nothing at all.
the one thing i kinda like, that seems unpopular among other techy people like me, is the microsoft account. I always hated having to deal with my license key, and now i don't. it's just there
I don't like it for home because I dread the situation where there might be a network blip or something and I'd be locked out of my own PC. However, I'm OK with it being used at work. The worst that can happen is that it's not my problem.
I'm torn on the MS login. I had to create logins for my kids when they got their own computers. On the other hand, it makes it really easy to limit what they can do
I lost all trust in MS keeping my PC operational after the time the disk check tool decided to "fix" my partition by DELETING ALL THE DATA. The "problem" was that there was a mismatch in the deleted files checksum. So, MS's fix = drop he entire partition's file table.
@KevinB I abhor how searching in the start menu also does a network search. No, MS, when I search for something in the start menu, I want something on my computer. Not some random thing online that happens to match the same string. If I don't have it on my computer I want to see no results.
effectively yea there's a lot of issues with windows that i dispise. but, after having spent the last 6 months to a year on a mac, i'd rather fix those issues than consider using some other OS at home
I'll use whatever works at work, idc, a code editor is a code editor
@aynber When I have to switch to 11 or 12 or whatever version I use after Windows 10 at home, if that is still an issue, I will probably handle it by creating logging in once with my microsoft account, and then using that, create a local admin account, disable the microsoft account locally, and then only create local accounts for any other users needed
AFAIK you can still create local accounts from the UI after you've signed in for the first time with your Microsoft account
so your kids don't necessarily need Microsoft logins--you can just use yours, then follow that process
@KevinB You can still do it. But it's done in such a way to force as many people to avoid using it: 1. start the install and have to have the connection unplugged 2. get to the step for the account 3. find the magic keystroke that opens command line 4. find the magic incantation that enables installation with local account 5. restart the installation process 6. then create a local account 7. finish the installation. 8. Plug the connection back in and wait for ages for updates and restarts
@Zoe-Savethedatadump Been a Linux user for about 15 years now. I just don't have it installed on my main home PC. Well, other than WSL. I have a laptop with Manjaro on it. Only Manjaro, I don't dual boot. I used to dual boot in the past but it gets annoying because I don't like restarting the machine.
I'm not super into VMs, either. Also used to use them but they are too resource intensive. And not that great to use as a main machine, IMO.
at home i primarily game, there's no reason to use linux and run into a 50% success rate when everything works on windows
I wish there was a reasonable alternative
mac is ******* atrocious, every time i turn around it's doing something incredibly dumb that just works on windows, then they pull this "Oh your OS is too old to use the new editor that is required for publishing to the app store, you should buy a new mac" bullshit
I love Mint, BTW. I almost exclusively ran it before.
I went with Manjaro for my laptop because 1. I got a glowing recommendation for it. 2. It's a rolling release, so you just update the packages. I don't use the laptop often (every few months), so I like the idea of not dealing with upgrades at all.
Also, Just Works. Even though it's based off Arch which is notoriously fiddly to setup.
Oh, and I use KDE. Used it since Mint. But I find Cinnamon very solid, as well. If you're transferring from Windows, then Cinnamon is probably the closest experience you can get. It looks amazing, offers customisation, and it's close-ish to Windows. With the option to change it.
I just like how infinitely customizable KDE is. Also, has the best music player I've ever used: Amarok. You can install it on other desktop environments but I've had it a bit buggy when I used it in Mint. It would occasionally freeze and have to be restarted. Might be better nowadays.
One thing Linux has nailed and I can't believe MS haven't followed suit is the installation. It's so easy. 1. You create your installation media (also needed for Windows) 2. You run it. In Windows this dumps you in a very long installation process. In Linux, just launches Linux. You click the thing that starts the installation - takes just few steps (regional settings and partitions). Then you still use the PC. I usually watch stuff on YouTube. Eventually it's finished - restart and it's done.
You can also automate it with no GUI or anything. It's still super easy. But for regular user, the Linux installation is a breeze.
Ubuntu is decent but IMO they went too far with their UI roughly a decade ago. I think they called it "Unity" or something. I used it for a bit and it felt like they made it different for the sake of making it different. Few things were OK. I liked they moved the task bar on the side (way more sense you have more useless screen space vertically than horizontally). But there were many things that were slightly out of place at almost any turn.
I have issues with Ubuntu's GUI, but I don't know if it's the GUI itself or if it's something with the drivers. When the display goes to sleep, I have a hard time getting it to load again
Not too much of any issue since I only use the gui when ripping CDs
Also, Ubuntu was notoriously unstable at the time. Pushing updates that weren't well tested. I think they were taking steps to get more stable. However, at the time Mint already figured this out. And it's Ubuntu-based to boot, so if you need any support, you can easily look up an article about Ubuntu and it's most of the time still applicable (except if it's very related to Ubuntu's UI)
Yeah, and that's why I like cinnamon. I like this general style of desktop. The major reason I don't use KDE is that Mint doesn't offer it out of the box (and that, AFAIK, it doesn't support notification badges either)
It used to support KDE... a reason I went with Magento is that the KDE distribution of Mint was discontinued. Not even sure why. There was also a KDE distribution of Ubunti (called Kubuntu) which was also discontinued. Well, not that you can't just install KDE on top. But, as you said, it's not out of the box. If hadn't liked Manjaro, I'd have went with Mint + custom KDE.
I just stumbled upon a question that was asked with the tags c++ and unreal-engine-5. This question was closed as "Needs details or clarity" by people who are clearly experienced in C++ but not Unreal Engine. I answered a question before that was exactly like that, but now that the given question...
I noticed that How to zip two Java Lists was originally written specifically about Java ArrayList, and then about 2.5 years later, the question was edited to make it more generic about the Java List class which ArrayList implements.
That threw me off a bit, since changing the question (even if...
in mac i have to use some stupid key combo, click notification, draw the circle, undo it "fixing" my circle, save it somewhere, close, click upload here in chat, click browse, then even finding the damn file in my file system was annoying. it defaulted to sort by name rather than by date created, wtf, it has a different sort for every view
anyway what does that circled button do
it's disabled and i see no option that would enable it
@KevinB They had an archive.org upload, and they had problems with it, so they instead invented a system where the they stop doing it, so the community does the exact same thing - i.e. the entire data dump change was reinventing the archive.org upload. It's mostly a joke
This question is similar to: What does "not currently ranked" mean?. If you believe it’s different, please edit the question, make it clear how it’s different and/or how the answers on that question are not helpful for your problem. — Thom A39 secs ago
if so, that is the standard dupe comment now
it changed in the platform a few weeks ago
@VLAZ I remain kind of confused why Discussions flags don't just piggy-back off the standard flag system...
We have updated the text of this auto-comment to say:
This question is similar to: (link to the duplicate). If you believe it’s different, please edit the question, make it clear how it’s different and/or how the answers on that question are not helpful for your problem.
really the worst part IMHO is the comma splice :-p
Shouldn't it be "edit the question to make it clear how..." or "edit the question, making it clear how..."? — tdyJun 28 at 18:45
@tdy or "...edit the question; make it clear...", or "...edit the question. Make it clear...". The current punctuation is definitely incorrect, though (it's a comma splice). — Ryan M ♦Jun 28 at 21:46
@RyanM I'm not; moving increasingly further away from the duplicate wording without also updating the dupe notice is not helpful for onboarding. The increasing inconsistency between different parts of the moderation systems is a net negative
@Zoe-Savethedatadump I mean...yeah the post notice is still bad but the previous auto-comment was not really better in any way. At least this new comment gives correct advice, so the next step should be to update the post notice to also give correct advice.
The system was already inconsistent, in that deleting and re-asking (what the post notice advises) will get your posts flagged for a moderator to tell you not to do that
@VLAZ Whenever I'm stuck on a Windows machine, I end up avoiding WSL and Docker as much as possible
I refuse to pay Microsoft more than I have to, so all my laptops have come with Windows Home, and I refuse to upgrade to Pro
That means that Docker uses WSL, and whenever I leave WSL on for Sufficiently Long:tm:, it suddenly decides to idle at 98% CPU use
Also infuriatingly, if I want to reliably debug C++ stuff without going into MSVS, I'm forced to use Docker, because Windows hides error messages entirely when a debugger isn't attached