- 6 Posts
- 15 Comments
There was postwowan, it is currently renamed to Hoppscotch https://github.com/hoppscotch/hoppscotch
lens0021@programming.devOPto
Linux@programming.dev•Amber the programming language compiled to Bash, 0.5.1 release
1·2 months agoThank you for this comment. I’m revisiting this comment because I need to write this…

lens0021@programming.devOPto
Linux@programming.dev•Amber the programming language compiled to Bash, 0.5.1 release
1·2 months agoFish is my main shell of choice and I use my self-written functions(https://github.com/lens0021/Lens0021_Personal.Fish/blob/main/conf.d/lens0021_personal.fish) daily. But it is hard for me to say Fish’s syntax is not weird. Especially, I’m a little fuzzy on how to use
argparse. I am sorry.
lens0021@programming.devOPto
Linux@programming.dev•Amber the programming language compiled to Bash, 0.5.1 release
3·2 months agoCurrently, Amber does not even support Bash 2 because Bash 2 does not support the
+=operator. (ticket) However, I believe that POSIX compliance is on Amber’s long-term milestone, and that it will eventually achieve this as its support range expands.
lens0021@programming.devOPto
Linux@programming.dev•Amber the programming language compiled to Bash, 0.5.1 release
3·2 months agotbh, I wouldn’t recommend that during alpha staging. There are still many bugs.
lens0021@programming.devOPto
Linux@programming.dev•Amber the programming language compiled to Bash, 0.5.1 release
3·2 months agoYep, the code you provided is compiled into this:
command_0="$(cat file.txt | grep "READY")" __status=$? if [ "${__status}" != 0 ]; then echo "Failed to read the file" fiSo, the outcome would depend on the
pipefailoption. (set -o pipefail)As you suggested, an Amberic snippet would be:
import { file_read } from "std/fs" import { match_regex } from "std/text" const result = file_read("file.txt") failed { echo "Failed to read the file" } if match_regex(result, "READY"): echo "file.txt contains READY"
lens0021@programming.devto
Linux@lemmy.ml•To the Korean Linux users: Which distro would you recommend?
1·3 months agoMine is also a joke. KakaoTalk, the most used massenger app in South Korea does not support Linux, a Wine approch is half-broken, and a WIP reverse-engineered Typescript & Rust based open-source client is not yet fully developed and never.
lens0021@programming.devto
Linux@lemmy.ml•To the Korean Linux users: Which distro would you recommend?
1·3 months agoWhat? I never heard that OS before though I am living in Korea. What are the pros of the OS? Does it have a native support for Kakao Talk?
lens0021@programming.devto
Linux@lemmy.ml•To the Korean Linux users: Which distro would you recommend?
2·3 months agoI assumed an ordinary person. My parents use the “한영키” to switch between Hangul and the alphabet. While I’m geeky enough to configure my Caps Lock key to function like that switch, most people wouldn’t even imagine that functionality is configurable.
lens0021@programming.devto
Linux@lemmy.ml•To the Korean Linux users: Which distro would you recommend?
1·3 months agodeleted by creator
lens0021@programming.devto
Linux@lemmy.ml•To the Korean Linux users: Which distro would you recommend?
1·3 months agodeleted by creator
lens0021@programming.devto
Linux@lemmy.ml•To the Korean Linux users: Which distro would you recommend?
1·3 months agodeleted by creator
lens0021@programming.devto
Linux@lemmy.ml•To the Korean Linux users: Which distro would you recommend?
3·3 months agoIf you’re okay with ibus-hangul, you can configure the keyroard shortcut for Gram.

Click “Add” and press “한/영” key on the keyboard.
ibus
lens0021@programming.devto
Linux@lemmy.ml•To the Korean Linux users: Which distro would you recommend?
20·3 months agoAll Korean keyboards, including the one on my LG Gram (which is a Korean model), have a dedicated key for switching between English and Korean (the “한영키”). Everyone who isn’t technically inclined uses this key. Using Ctrl + Space is a bad user experience.
lens0021@programming.devto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL About the Jeju Massacre, where South Korean forces wiped out 10 percent of the island of Jeju for the crime of organizing a General StrikeEnglish
3·3 months agoAll eight current high school Korean history textbooks describe the Jeju April 3 Incident with an average of over one page of content. – https://www.jejusori.net/news/articleView.html?idxno=435552
Maybe I just forgot, but one page is to hard to remember. I graduacted high school ~15 years ago.
lens0021@programming.devto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL About the Jeju Massacre, where South Korean forces wiped out 10 percent of the island of Jeju for the crime of organizing a General StrikeEnglish
6·4 months agoI have edited my comment. The public should do pay attention. At least the government, politicians, or mass media should. The most famous thing from the island currently is its fruit. Thank you for sharing this link because it made me visit the article.
lens0021@programming.devto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL About the Jeju Massacre, where South Korean forces wiped out 10 percent of the island of Jeju for the crime of organizing a General StrikeEnglish
31·4 months agoI am Korean living in Korea and this is a not well-known massacre even in Korea. I just heard the public does not pay attention to this though they should. (I am the one of public)





The answer to the question is no. In my settings, zoom only works while holding down the Alt key. So it is fine.