Mixing tabs and white spaces in 2024 is categorically a you problem lmao
Furry artist and streamer - malleyeno.com
Mixing tabs and white spaces in 2024 is categorically a you problem lmao
In addition to the list of explanations for why disabled people can exist in a fantasy setting that chumbalumber@lemmy.blahaj.zone provided, I’ll also just say:
Using diegetic explanations for why a problematic aspect exists in a piece of fictional media does not address the substance of the problem. The problem is that disability is often not represented in fantasy stories. Pointing out that there’s an in-universe explanation for why this may be the case doesn’t solve the lack of representation. These stories are fiction, and you can add any explanation for why disabled people exist as easily as you can erase disability completely.
This video does a good job of explaining this some more: https://youtu.be/AxV8gAGmbtk?si=YRvXjpZv_YP9Z5sC
I might be already exposing myself as an emacs user, but I think Lisp naming convention is pretty reasonable. I use it in other languages as far as their language rules allow me
if a variable or function is a predicate (as in if it tests if something is true or not), append p
or _p
/-p
variables and functions both have lisp case variable-name-here
. Sub for _
in languages that dont allow -
in names
unused or unexposed variables are prefixed _
.
top level packages get naming rights. So if I’m making cool-package
then variables or functions that are specific to it are cool-package-variable
(especially if it is exposed to other packages). cool-package/variable
is also good if allowed.
otherwise, separate namespaces with /
. So there’s main-function
and my/main-function
. If /
is reserved, then I assume the language has a way of segmenting namespaces already and just default to that since _
or -
would get ambiguous here.
See the rest here: https://github.com/bbatsov/emacs-lisp-style-guide
The rust compiler holds your hand, wraps you in blankets, makes you hot chocolate, kisses you on the forehead before it gently and politely points out what you did wrong and how you can solve it step-by-step. It would never think of something as heinous as swearing at you, shame on you for insulting my wife’s honour like this.