Unfortunately I can’t help you with Nobara, but I’m surprised you’re having troubles with EndeavourOS.
EOS has been working out of the box for me for almost everything.
Engineer and coder that likes memes.
Unfortunately I can’t help you with Nobara, but I’m surprised you’re having troubles with EndeavourOS.
EOS has been working out of the box for me for almost everything.
Thanks for summarising.
I wish your anus well.
Am I out of the loop?
Why don’t people like Pizzacake?
Depends on who you think the people are.
CTOs, technical team leads and such can make those decisions. And devs can also suggest migrating to simpler solutions.
If a tech giant like Amazon can do it like they did with Prime Video, I don’t think it’s impossible other companies can do so too.
I’d have recommended it as well.
Popular stuff is usually available in most languages.
You can have the best tool in the world and still find people just hitting their own face with it.
You better hope the sound is baffling when you’re at a concert!
Thanks for the response. Seems like I can’t assume other CS degrees are comparable.
We definitely have a strong focus on security in my degree, but I still believe that awareness of what you’re running on your machine and potential dangers of those programs fall into the category of common sense. Mishandling secrets, having bad authentication or not knowing how to setup SSL is definitely experience stuff though.
Neither young or naive. Just assuming others share my experience.
Makes sense, I feel bad for the guys that were happy for a chance and got screwed over. (By the hackers, not you, haha)
That’s a bad take. Unless you get your knowledge purely from shady tutorials or have a fast track bootcamp education, it’s unlikely you never touch on security basics.
I’m a software design undergrad and had to take IT Sec classes. Other profs also touched on how to safely handle dependencies and such.
While IT Security is its own specialisation, blindly trusting source code others provide you with is something a good programmer shouldn’t do.
If you need a metaphor: Just because a woodworker specialises in tables, doesn’t mean they can’t build a chair.
Edit: Seems like my take is the bad one 😂
It’s sad that this works. You’d think especially software professionals would be the most vigilant about running unknown code.
Bottom left panel is completely redundant, but it still makes the joke hit so much harder for me
It’s weird. There seem to be a lot of games that offer native Linux clients but they tend to not be maintained that well. Quite a shame really.
Like many others already said. Being self taught is ok, but employers need at least some kind of confirmation about your skills. So getting some kind of officisl certificate will make your job search a lot easier.
Microsoft offers a bunch of .NET certificates if you do their C# courses for example. You can also become a certified Linux professional.
Find something that interests you and then start learning by doing some tutorials. The most important thing is that you have fun and won’t burn yourself out working in a field you don’t enjoy.
Where I’m from there’s demand for Web Devs, Java devs, .NET devs, It Support, Network Engineers, Embedded systems, whatever.
It doesn’t compile or transpile in actuality. It generates Java based on an abstract syntax tree. The concrete syntax is not considered in Java generation by MPS.
Because it was easier to use Java primitives than implement the constants myself.
MPS uses projectional editing. Which means for the user that everything you do is free from concrete syntax, and you basically edit a graphical representation of that abstract syntax tree directly, while it looks like you’re in a textual editor.
So I define abstract nodes that may have certain relationships with each other and then give them a representation in the editor (which is what you see in the screenshot). These nodes may also have generators assigned to them, which use map/reduce operations to generate whatever source code I desire. It usually includes its own bit of code, and triggers code generation of its children as well.
I hope that was somehow clear 😄
Great idea if I have to extend it
Ha, that’s funny. When I run some Visual Studio builds on Windows it completely freezes at times.
Never have that issue on EOS with KDE.