sevon
I was vaguely aware that some ancient architectures had weird byte widths, but I did not know about this. Pretty interesting.
This paper cannot succeed without mentioning the PDP-10 (though noting that PDP-11 has 8-bit bytes), and the fact that some DSPs have 24-bit or 32-bit words treated as “bytes.” These architectures made sense in their era, where word sizes varied and the notion of a byte wasn’t standardized. Today, nearly every general-purpose and embedded system adheres to the 8-bit byte model. The question isn’t whether there are still architectures where bytes aren’t 8-bits (there are!) but whether these care about modern C++… and whether modern C++ cares about them.
The file is named Cargo.toml. Whatever dependencies you add to there are automatically downloaded by Cargo. You can manage them with cargo add
and cargo remove
.
cargo install
is not the same thing. That installs binaries. I last installed cargo-release to automate the annoying part of managing git tags and crate version number.
Hey that looks nice at a glance. Will check it out!
I’ve been using mega synced folders for most stuff. Works fine.
I tried to do this before, but it did not work out.
I couldn’t make the meta key alone open overview. I also tried to add a dock there, but I can only have a panel when not in overview, which is the opposite of that I wanted. I also liked the notification menu and the quick toggles menu in top right corner.
I have been planning to get into plasma extension development to fix some of these issues.