Arch was the first distro I actually got to work on my Optimus laptop after trying to install like 5 other distros. I liked it but the AUR freaked me out, so I switched to Ubuntu. :P
@rlemon That's the reason I don't mind gnome. But the issue of scaling remains. I don't really notice it as much until I boot to windows and feel my eyeballs relax
@rlemon I mean UI/font scaling. I find the default too small, so I tried to change the scaling settings but it doesn't work for all apps consistently. Especially Chrome, which is very stubborn.
@rlemon Same here, but on Windows the trackpad works much better. Also the scaling and the design are more consistent, it is just a much more polished experience. But I hate using Windows for anything productive.
@Cereal Cakes need very even temperature distributions, ovens have convection fans for that. I don't know if you can achieve that with a grill as the heat is very directional.
https://manta.cs.vt.edu/cs3754/Images/CS3754-CloudSD-Poster.png ^ This is a class I can take this semester. Does it look like it'll teach me anything about cloud?
@LadyBird There were forced updates, it happened in front of my eyes. Twice. The poor machine could barely handle just running the DE, which is why we decided to switch to Mint.
But when I pass it as
.queue(
... other args ...
boundaryFilter.topLeftCorner.upperBound
);
It throws an error that the upperBound is not compatible with [number, number] which is the tuple
Hey guys, I'm having some ts issues. I have declared a type like export type Bounds = [number, number];, but when I pass [BOUNDARY_WIDTH, BOUNDARY_WIDTH] to my function, it tells me that "Argument of type 'number[]' is not assignable to parameter of type '[number, number]." How do I get it to recognize it as a tuple?
@david Those look cool! I am actually trying to generate something which could be used as a map for a ship-based game. So currently trying to figure out how to make it more game-y. :P