They will try until it passes. And if it’s stopped in the courts they will try again.
They will try until it passes. And if it’s stopped in the courts they will try again.
No, it was withdrawn, removed from the agenda so there was no vote, now it’s back on.
Modern C compilers have a lot of features you can use to check for example for memory errors. Rusts borrow-checker is much stricter as it’s designed to be part of the language, but for low-level code like the Linux kernel you’ll end up having to use Rust’s unsafe
feature on a lot of code to do things from talking to actual hardware to just implementing certain data structures and then Rust is about as good as C.
Lots of categories which Rust doesn’t prevent, and in the kernel you’ll end up with a lot of unsafe
Rust, so it can’t guarantee memory-safety in all cases.
But it shows areas and how numbers are suposedly formatted in those areas and those numbers have thousand separators.
The map is wrong in that regard anyway, because quite a lot of languages/countries actually use a space or half-space as a thousand separator.
Does decimal here mean (decimal) dot or do they not use decimal numbers/fractions?
That story makes no sense, if you want to order 98 of something you’d write 98, not 98,000 or 98.000, no matter what decimal separater you prefer, especially for something where ordering a fraction makes no sense.
Python 3 wasn’t a rewrite, it just broke compatibility with Python 2.
It’s so ridiculous, last year some politicians from the CSU visited De Santis. They regularly copy talking points from the US, which make absolutely no sense. They even tried the “drag queens are groomers” thing, but it didn’t catch on. Next they’ll probably try to ban books or some other bullremoved like that.
Yeah, I remember that, but I wouldn’t call that worsening women’s rights, it was something completely optional and if at all only highlighted existing sexism. It was more or less a susidy for families that didn’t sent their kids to kindergarten, the law didn’t state which parent had to take care of the children or anything like that. There was criticism that children wouldn’t grow up around other children and that it would hold women back in their careers because it would most likely be the mother who stays at home, but that’s not the fault of the law. And similar programs exist in Norway, Sweden and Denmark, and generally people consider those countries as progressive.
Regarding abortions one law making it hard to access was the ridiculous § 219a StGB and that was abolished in 2022. The other problem is that doctors can’t be forced to perform abortions. The problem in general here is religious groups.
Maybe the fact that conservative governments erode the rights of women?
Do they really? I know about stuff in the US, but what about the other countries. At least for Germany I can say that in the last 10 years I can’t really recall anything where the government tried to worsen women’s rights.
Whenever I open Nano basically all the commands it has are listed at the bottom, for small things it’s perfectly fine.