That would be wrong in every technical sense. You’re saying that .first()
would skip the 0th item.
First = leftmost.
That would be wrong in every technical sense. You’re saying that .first()
would skip the 0th item.
First = leftmost.
Don’t you use a formatter that fixes whitespace in sloppy writing?
I sniffed and smirked in agreement and joy of camaraderie.
You😆are🤓🤣wrong🤬😡! 💯💯👁️🍑👁️
This is the only acceptable answer
I have a search bar and no menu.
Yes, indeed, and fuck you too.
Everyone is misrepresented in the two-party system.
Thank you my unbiased friend
This. I worked in a hardware store as a floater (I’m good at things, they ask me to do random) and often found myself irritated at how often I need to go outside for a minute to meet a customer or something, and then come back in and all the fucking lights are off.
But I don’t understand why them being connected makes one dependent on the other, unless half of the supply alone can’t support the workload. What is the “electrical utility level”
Can you please elaborate on the technical details of the failures? What was the hidden dependency?
See I don’t think that is wrong either. Technically accurate words are valid substitutes for orthodox ones, especially in a comedic sense.
Usually programming. Or trying out an odd peripheral. But other than that, normal usage, it still breaks.
Invisible because there is a T nearby
Unfortunately, $100 isn’t enough to satisfy varying tastes, while also leaving out no one. Aside from that, kids didn’t recognize sacrifice, nor were most of them taught the manners to say “No, but thank you.”
Honestly, I think you probably should have known.
In my experience, windows always gets something wrong with drivers and I have to go do some stupid shit to fix it. And then later fight windows update as it tries to override my fix. Windows problems are rarely immediately apparent, whereas Linux problems usually are.
There’s another way to think about it which I actually use. Look in the empty bin and say “zero”, then move an apple and say “one”.