

It’s a joint project between many organisations, primarly KDE and Gnome. In practice right now it’s legally hosted by Gnome and they’re trying to make flathub into its own organisation.
It’s a joint project between many organisations, primarly KDE and Gnome. In practice right now it’s legally hosted by Gnome and they’re trying to make flathub into its own organisation.
YAML 1.2 is a superset of JSON. Every valid JSON is valid YAML 1.2
There are plenty of titles that do just that you can buy instead you know.
Except it’s been 2 years and most people haven’t yet migrated away from Twitter to anything.
For a linux phone
I’m suggesting building a Rust library and exposing a C ABI. That’s what rsvg does for example.
You’re aware that Rust gives you access to the full C ABI?
What language are you going to use instead that has a better ABI story? Swift? Or maybe a dynamic language like Python?
He says he has had permission. Given that it’s a mostly 1 person project it’s possibly true.
Like sudo that has had zero days lurking for 10 years?
I’m not advocating for reimplementing stuff for no good reason though.
And there are apps that make it very very easy and fun. Check out street complete.
You can contribute them!
There’s a pretty barebones editor in Organic Maps, but you can also check out Street Complete and Every door (more advanced and less user friendly, though insanely efficient)
Zig is a very new and immature language. It won’t be kernel-ready for at l’East another 10 years.
a better syntax
That’s pretty suggestive. Rust syntax is pretty good. Postfix try
is just better for example.
Zig also uses special syntax for things like error and nullability instead of having them just be enums, making the language more complex and less flexible for no benefit.
Syntax is also not everything. Rust has extremely good error messages. Going through Zig’s learning documentation, half the error messages are unreadable because I have to scroll to see the actual error and data because it’s on the same line as the absolute path as the file were the error comes from
No hidden memory allocation
That’s a library design question, not a language question. Rust for Linux uses its own data collections that don’t perform hidden memory allocations instead of the ones from the standard library.
it’s more readable
I don’t know, Rust is one of the most readablelangueage for me.
Fast compile time
Is it still the case once you have a very large project and make use of comptime?
it’s simpler to learn
Not true. Because it doesn’t have the guardrails that rust has, you must build a mental model of where the guardrails should be so you don’t make mistakes. Arguably this is something that C maintainers already know how to do, but it’s also not something they do flawlessly from just looking at the bugs that regularly need to be fixed.
Being able to write code faster does not equate being able to write correct code faster.
Really great interop with C
Yes, because it’s basically C with some syntax sugar. Rust is a Generational change.
It is absolue in safe Rust, aka 99% of Rust code.
Oh, I see what you mean. I thought you meant using your phone as a trackpad sorry
Kde connect has that I think
A lower cut. 30% revenue cut means we pay more than necessary for games and we also miss out on some indie games that cannot be profitable with such a large cut.
WhatsApp has MITM on the server side which is how Facebook scans your messages for targeted advert
You shouldn’t make claims like this when there is no evidence for it.
Signal which (unless they changed something with the profiles thing) was always P2P E2E
Signal has never been P2P.
They dix not build the compositor from scratch, they built it on top of smithay, a library similar to wlroots but written in Rust.
I don’t know if you’ve actually tried to use GTK or QT, but it’s insanely painful. There is a reason almost all apps are written in Electron. Native GUI toolkits suck. If they had used GTK they would have still had an outdated and hard to maintain toolkit, and to deal with Gnome politics. Using GTK was actually the initial idea.
If we want Linux Desktop to succeed, at some point we have to build tools that people want to use. I’m glad they’re doing it.
Does portal 2 coop count? Technically it’s a FPS