The fish version of history search doesn't just do a simple substring search like in bash. It's already more powerful by doing a subsequence search. See https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/pull/9476
fish suggests commands as you type, shown as faded text after the cursor. But suggestions aren't replacements for history search. Only one suggestion is shown at a time, and you don't have much control over what is shown.
It's popular though, so it's also available in zsh through the autosuggestions plugin.
I would be pretty appreciated if people criticize my project. That is how you grow. If people tend hide cruel truth behind applause, the world would just crumbled.
OP is claiming amazing results, people are poking obvious holes that good single core implementations completely rip the scalability claims to shreds. Near linear scalability is not impressive if—even at the highest throughput—the computation pales by comparison to Rust on a single core.
I do not see how the comparison to the iPhone here stands.
What you appreciate has little to do with whether we should assume others are thick-skinned. If someone has always been knocked down they will struggle to positively accept criticism regardless of how well meant it might be.
I really think I take criticism well... The problem is that people were criticizing us for not doing things that were literally done on the second paragraph. So at this point it didn't feel like productive criticism? That's like being criticized for being naked when you're full clothed. How do you even make sense of that...
People are more childish than they like to believe. It's a mix of jealousy and ignorant skepticism. What you're doing is incredibly interesting I look forward to seeing it develop!
BYTEDANCE submitted a patch few months ago to reduce the system reboot time for a few milliseconds. That means a lot for rebooting their hundreds of thousands of VMs.
Are you still using easyeffect? It has improved A LOT since the first port of PipeWire. And as mentioned, the author is pretty responsive on reported issues.
I think the fact that helix doesn't really need a plugin/extension system is beautiful. It means that it's simple enough to config yet still powerful. Helix smooth out the learning curve in this good way and I hope it won't become complicated and make learning curve as deep as vim/nvim.
Please tell me you used Stable Diffusion to generate this repo after seeing this post on HN, and not that this is some kind of odd almost-rule-34 fandom domain.
I believe a predecessor to that meme would date back at least to the early ‘90s, as demonstrated by the plot point in Wayne’s World 2 in which Olivia d’Abo’s character was approvingly identified for holding a book on Unix network programming.
It would be nice if there was a "more stable" version rather than "newest all the time no matter what".
I switched from Arch to Ubuntu because they shipped a broken avr-gcc despite upstream GCC saying "roll it all back, guys", because it was the newest version. Doesn't matter that it produced deeply faulty output, newest is best!