Xcode implies MacOS, you can use make there too, just beware that some commandline tools take different arguments on BSDs.
Xcode implies MacOS, you can use make there too, just beware that some commandline tools take different arguments on BSDs.
As the other comments have already said it’s not Python. Not sure what you mean with text formatting, do you mean that it’s multiple strings that are concatenated using +
? You don’t need the +
in Python, you can do
some_function(
"part one of really long string"
" part two of really long string"
)
Which is identical to
some_function("part one of really long string part two of really long string")
It’s quite simple actually: The user wanted to delete their account, but forgot their password so they requested a password reset. Before the password reset email was delivered, the user remembered their password and deleted their account. The password reset email is finally delivered and apparently some email clients open all the links in the background for whatever reason, so it wasn’t actually the user who clicked the password reset link.
You can write Fortran Python in any language.
What Crowdstrike does to bypass this requirement is that the CS Falcon is just an engine, that loads, interprets and executes code from definition files.
If Microsoft really has “rigorous QA and cert” for kernel drivers then they shouldn’t have certified this, because now it’s a certified bypass for the certification.
And I thought it meant those programmers are bad at memory management because their stack is always full.
Defaults to int if I’m not mistaken.
You don’t need the v, it just means verbose and lists the extracted files.
Some devs like macos, stuff still needs to be deployed to linux servers, possibly using docker containers.
Docker on macos runs in a virtual machine, for some people that might not be desirable.
I suppose I usually try -h
and if that doesn’t work I try the long version or the man page.
Never seen -?
, it’s either -h
, --help
, or -help
for programs that just want to be different.
In 2008 a lot of most software was still 32 bit, you couldn’t use more than 4GiB per process. In that sense anything more than that was overkill unless you used a lot of programs at the same time and your OS supported physical address extension (PAE).
I think this is actually very unlikely, flatpak is most likely using some TCP based protocol and TCP would take care of this transparently, flatpak wouldn’t know if any packets had to be retransmitted.
There are a few time zones that are 45 minutes off, like Nepal Standard Time which is UTC+5:45, some places in Western Australia and South Australia use UTC+08:45 and the Chatham Islands are at UTC+12:45 or UTC+13:45 in summer.
Just enable all compiler warnings (and disable the ones you don’t care about), a good C compiler can tell you about using unassigned variables.