[00:12] as long as you dont need to allocate storage outside of impl, you are fine [00:12] So does anyone know of a plugin or snippet that given a path, linenumber, and column (i.e. /usr/share/blah.c:45:3) in a file can jump to that location? [00:12] False [00:12] but this doesn't work [00:39] then just run caddy, even simpler ^^ [00:39] write a FUSE driver that writes files to disk in reverse [00:39] zumba_addict: That proves everything right there. :) [00:46] 0.6!= 0.6° [00:47] design by community means compromises, bike shedding, and lack of vision [00:47] After you run it, is too late to make that determination. [00:47] gurrkiin: try GIT_TRACE=1 git diff --name-only and pastebin the output [00:47] It's pretty vague. [01:09] when you're behind it, you might not be able to know [01:09] nice larger property in somewhat ruraly area [01:23] [-X proxy_protocol] [-x proxy_address[:port]] [destination] [port] [01:24] What group are these elements of? [01:48] hey [01:48] it is a negative representation of a positive value [01:48] but it works if e.g. 'Maybe Int' instead of 'Maybe a' [01:49] your own decoder? I thought the patents on MP3 expired a while ago [01:49] when you specifically ask for a class level var it should not be grading random shit it finds in other scopes, epic fail [01:52] it didn't have a name like "spi" or "i2c" [01:52] over 4 hours of material :< [02:01] that's what she said MoneroKing [02:01] What if you are in melbourne and have to turn left? :D [02:01] i hate the us [02:15] no vegans [02:15] (void)(you guys) [02:18] V7 : Why tor every VM? Why not have the tor daemon running on one VM in LAN and proxy the other hosts through there? [02:18] I think Im supposed to divide both sides by 7 (or p(t) rather) [03:09] wait what... this seems to suggest that nginx handles SIGSTOP to stop the daemon [03:09] That's nice. I've seen quite a number of bad employees at Red Hat Software, too. [03:09] timemage: yes this is the one [03:09] :help 'fillchars' [05:44] right 2014 there was a mini version but just that [05:44] Borw3 try iwconfig command and paste the output [05:44] e.g. this (I know it's not thin film but) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MOSFET#/media/File:MOSFET_Structure.png [06:13] they eat styrofoam [06:13] Coming from C++ you'll have a lot of things to relearn, thinking about if will just be a minor one [06:13] hey guys im recently made a deploy of a openbsd on my kvm stack (linux host) all my machines and the linux host itself goes through the openbsd routing, i wanna know which attack vectors are exposed for my host server? [06:13] AnrDaemon, benbrown, Cool, that appears to be working. Thanks for the help! [06:14] It was also just a o/ to sidestep the whole time of day greeting. [06:34] I'm going to go with something from the collection of opamps I posesss... [06:34] i want to have a look [06:35] Generally - in home contexts your router is a dhcp client to the upstream isp and dhcp server to your lan nodes [06:35] At least not as well as this pays [06:35] thing is the book is teaching something vastly different than my notes [07:05] like if you need a couple of mA flowing [07:05] (as a side note, my /opt is my 1 TB HDD) [07:05] what's /dev/ufsid for? [07:05] let me understand and try that [07:05] how are you ircing here? [07:06] fromList [('a',55)] [07:22] oh ok greycat i'm sorry but i didn't find anything more recent [07:22] well hopefully anyway [07:22] SopaXorzTaker: I was lucky I think :p [07:23] yeah, NAT is much better [07:23] if you get them with missing ones [07:23] u cant buy beer after 19:00 WTF in norway [07:45] And it dawned upon me that maybe we have to replace the order with something more general. [07:45] and a default xorg config would just see that 2nd one as the only one; or you can configure it yourself by pci address [07:54] It's impossible to detect all the errors in the code, but you can fairly quickly detect that some site has been compromised. And unless they run a lot of exotic plugins a update is usually a quick fix. Given that the customer knows they need to do it... [07:54] so this bill might just be white noise [07:54] and there's still the blocks you can't access because the flash controller said so, which may still contain data or something [07:54] As you said irc is the glue, is this channel here from [matrix] on freenode and just bridged to matrix? [08:15] and have stuff fall down into the julia set and spin around [08:15] so I used the wirewrap, and nail-and-plank style [08:15] the minimum that the pool has configured for itself [08:15] sigh, so I fixed the async errors with python 3.7... and now I'm down to same openssl error with it as with 2.7 [08:15] Monero price in USD = $103.75 [08:20] Ng in nyc they always delivered before the date [08:20] u have a good one [R] [08:36] you will have to change to git [08:36] its been described to me as something unmistakable [09:17] ^7heo: Well, please to meet *you* then :) [09:17] better, but you also want /* [09:17] I can try that command [11:19] want to verify an issue [11:19] Hello RandomGeek ... what can we help you with? [11:22] dina16: did it work previously, say in a previous version of Ubuntu? [11:22] Startywith /msg nolyc !help [11:22] *but you do get a new crt [11:44] or did at one point [11:44] why hsv not rgb [12:13] motte : You can blacklist the card ( internal ) but that i would not suggest [12:14] I have a quite entertaining situation where a select ... from .... where .... and (foo,bar) in (subselect foo,bar from .... where ... bar ~ thing) ... works but "... thing ~ bar" gets a "Invalid Regular expression: quantifier operand 2210E" error. [12:56] probe your audince with UMP [12:56] this shit is lil better [14:21] recommend tutorial [14:22] Because I'm using one of the drives as a backup drive for Windows XP and Windows 7 [14:22] yeah, I dont get the 'lets intrude on others' personal freedoms' [14:39] kernel-3xp: Linus cannot even validly answer if they are there for the same reason. [14:39] Wait, you barely know high-school-level mathematics, yet you feel qualified to comment on how to teach mathematics that is way above your pay grade (at least presently)? [14:40] or a different usage of the word "factor", if "factorial time complexity" i would start by writing out some evaluations for factorial() (!) and then see how many of the total terms are evaluated when 50 percent of the bits/digits are used up [14:40] The distinction between admin and commit is basically the ability to add more contributors. [14:40] the implicit instantiation is in int main when you instantiate "inst" [14:40] corona discharge! [14:56] solene: interesting. do you know why it happens? [14:56] or something inside elasticsearch? [14:56] j416: I did the git hard reset, when you mentioned it, but I spend time writing the last report on github issue and didn't do that clean command, I tried it now with --dry-run, and now I'm going from here, moment [15:00] scrubs I use iOS on my microwaves [15:01] gloomy_: their priority is to minimize the amount of effort to produce a reusable solution. maintaining multiple discrete products is hard [15:01] well, they bill a bit differently. aws will charge you for every little thing [15:27] The problem being that I need to record two voltages, or at least precisely know when to start recording [15:27] why in GDB I can see a call to my static inline function please ? gcc ignore for optimization surely the keywords "static inline" now ? [15:27] armin: in my opinion it doesn't (the last part) [15:27] fo-table is used if both formatexpr and formatprg are empty [15:27] its on bitpay anyway [15:28] How can I know if it's running on 1.8GHz or 4GHz? [16:15] ignoring the awkwardness of that style that makes mistakes easier, how are you checking "same pointer"? [16:15] in fact, it worked, but i remove using bioctl -d sd1, re-use fdisk -iy.. and dd if=/dev/null... [16:26] Donald Trump doing? [16:26] wow define:meaning is new to me [17:07] or should you using a combo of spaces and tabs when indenting? [17:07] why sed and grep when there is awk [17:07] about how much power do you think i'll need for 8 108s? [17:07] GreenJello: uh, so if I commit/init a repo with symlinks to dirs (in the same tree), will it work? [17:07] I2c is 'simulatef' in arduino isn't it? [17:07] hans_: a loop should be good enough for(a = 0; a < 4096; a++) if(buf[a] != 0) break; if(a >= 4096) { ... buf was all 0 ... } [17:46] Juseir: Let's start from the beginning. You said you "have a theroem" and that you want to prove its "reverse". What do you exactly mean by those? [17:46] eh, I'm not sure you've missed much interesting since 2007 [17:47] _ymir, I have no idea :) [17:58] that's ok, as long as you don't run out of chickens [17:58] web and media shits? [18:00] dmwit: so that’s just a bug? from the intended semantics that you have described it seems like that should work [18:00] Figured it [18:00] thank god for music [18:00] what's the language extension for @ as a symbol for passing arguments the next level up? [18:01] on a normal day [19:07] But as always, ask around more - and keep in mind the wrt is best with openwrt. So that means step one is removing linksys' firmware. [19:07] Is what? [19:20] i know the problem is `pollForever` returning `IO ()` [19:20] Jan-: the typedef says "any time you see ltc_timecode, pretend I wrote "struct ltc_timecode" [19:21] i.e. edit the files [19:27] 11.2.1 [19:27] final touches for usability [19:30] So if every germany says... ok... we will not produce any CO2 from now on ever again... [19:30] bluezinc: ggVG is an almost completely useless command sequence. Use ggxG instead where x is the operator you want to use, for example ggdG instead of ggVGd (or even better :%d). To run a ex command on the whole file use :% :: Ask me about ranger. [19:30] Kevin`, you do know that repeating your question indicates that you have reading comprehension issues as to my recent reply to you, right? :) [19:45] any way to group a query that uses math of other queries/ [19:46] without the feature, each generator must store the state of the longest run in the table. [20:35] okay so even after factoring in generator power loss and long distance transmission, led is much more efficient? [20:35] its not that important that id go for malpractice [20:35] including port. [20:35] CheckDavid: the laptop may be providing noisy power, but it does definitely sound like a ground loop [20:35] jonnno: ubuntu 18.04 has also now a minimal option in the setup [21:15] tomasino: its much more efficent [21:15] im not authing with a command but with SASL [21:15] "you know what the chain of command is? its a giant chain i haul off and get and beat people until they know who's in ruttin command" [21:15] I try to keep all site/vhost-specific stuff under conf.d/ [22:19] that sucks [22:19] Or there is VLANs [22:19] I'm saying why does it decide that the text is bad but not the title [22:19] One time I bought 100 dice bags off ebay. They were 1 penny each, free shipping. I purchased them individually, minutes or hours apart. [22:19] yeah, I see [22:35] Nope - kind of wondering what's the difference between having just instruments play and having instruments + singing [22:35] https://i.redd.it/z5801aoxa3n11.jpg [22:35] hapax, is the newest bot [22:35] rso-support: gtmanfred's suggestion actually solves that for you [22:36] How to filter out http and https url in wireshark? The current filter is "tcp.port == 8080 || udp.port 8080" as i want to filter out packets hitting at port 8080, but if i set another filter like tcp.port == 443 then it will start displaying all secured packets, i tried by using "&&" operator but it shows some yellow box and no packets receive after that. Please help! [22:45] I’m a noob but I have comptia security+ looking into aws cert is this path good? [22:45] multithreading is the future wheather you like it or not, but honestly I would rather have a CPU with lots of cores instead of a CPU with only a few and a GPU [22:54] kludge do you think the AC system is built into the seat? [22:54] then get sued for copyright infringement [23:20] right now I'm just using variables called ltc_hours ltc_mins etc [23:20] guess not [23:20] it's called disklabel [23:20] I've done extensive tests/benchamrks for your delivery [23:21] argon seems to be the primary, last cert I have on therw with SCTs was found on pilot and rocketeer a couple days after argon [23:21] the manpage says it is broken but I can play it with no problems [23:31] yeah, that's what i did, at first, with bash 3.2, and then seeing that when my INT handler was run, and I was ready to kill those PIDS, they were gone, thanks to bash 4.4's behavior [23:31] Goop: domains don't get blocked, IPs do [23:32] looking at a highway you don't drive on? [23:32] everybody talks about how quiet the iMac Pro is compared to the iMac [23:41] FiXato: lmk if you have any more ideas [23:41] All new (non-refurbished) Biostar iDEQ SFF barebones carry a 1-year manufacturer's warranty from the original purchase date.