And you could define first-class functions as a necessary component and render that trivial, but it's not either universally agreed nor clear that you should
I think of first class functions as objects in their own right, which you can pass around like one does with a "normal" variable. Though that's hardly a precise definition.
Oh no, people can start parsing ls? What's next, will dd now have --options? Will tar's man page fit on one page? Will ed become the standard text editor? /o\
@JeffSchaller That's a really old question. Mikeserv hasn't been around in chat for a while, and possibly not on the site, though he did post an answer on 17th Jan.
I've been dealing with an issue whereby df is reporting a much larger usage of an exfat partition mounted onto my system from a USB drive.
df -h gives:
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sdb3 4.6T 4.2T 396G 92% /media/smb
Whereas du -ch reports:
3.7T .
3.7T tota...
@StephenKitt I was thinking it might be something like that since it seems like it's an external drive, but I can reproduce it on my system with an encryptfs mounted volume (dir):
$ df -i .
Filesystem Inodes IUsed IFree IUse% Mounted on
/home/terdon/.saphetor 21250048 1171150 20078898 6% /home/terdon/saphetor
$ du -cs --inodes
15576 .
15576 total
@JeffSchaller eägh, muru's idea about looking for a answer about the new development on that is a nice idea... just too bad that the problematic idea there is in the question itself, and all the king's votes and all the king's bounties will not make the question move any lower on the page...
Though I would have thought the libssl would need to be rebuilt for a newer platform, because it would be linking to older libraries, but perhaps that's not necessary either. Seeing as it is all about exporting symbols, which the newer libraries would already know about.
@ilkkachu Glad to see this point being brought up. I've never felt I could consider that Q/A the canonical one on parsing ls. There, the things I would point less experienced users to are either buried or framed in a way that makes them harder than necessary to get. If we (the community) ever decided to replace it (as the canonical Q) with a more accessible one, I would happily try to be of help.
@JeffSchaller Just happened to look at your answer on the "getting to know you thread". You say you had a Epson Laserjet 1500 that lasted 20 years? Is that common?
From the phrasing, I suppose you no longer have it.
We're excited to announce that AWS will be sponsoring Unix & Linux beginning September 27 through December 31. We wanted to give you a heads up and walk you through what it will look like.
How and where will the sponsorship be displayed?
The sponsorship will be shown in the top right header of th...
@fra-san Thank you. I looked at Meta briefly, but did not see it.
@cutrightjm Just speculation, but Amazon has a reputation for treating their workers terribly, which not everyone is OK with.
And there were blog posts I read from someone who was relatively senior, like a senior developer or something (forget his name), that Amazon has a reputation for being a terrible place to work. I think he meant in terms of atmosphere. In contrast, Google is (or was) great, at least according to him.
Also, it's possible Amazon is destroying retail in the places where it is, which again may not be welcome everywhere.
Disclaimer: I know little about any of this. I just read some articles. But I do buy things on Amazon.
I do notice that the Amazon delivery people who arrive here seem very harried.
Was just curious, I personally think it's good that these larger companies are sponsoring unix.SE. All the downvotes yet no one explained the AWS one. At least the IBM post has some reasoning
@cutrightjm Well, at least Amazon shareholders like Amazon. For the rest of the planet, I suppose it's a mixed bag. Mostly people don't love giant corporations, because once they get big enough they think they can just do anything.
That post doesn't specify what sponsorship involves.
@JeffSchaller You wrote:
> I started off grading exams, but that quickly turned into C programming on the VAX there; the program would generate randomized tests -- all with the same structure but with different coefficients or numerical values, to prevent cheating.
I don't understand how that is C programming. It sounds like a job for TeX.
@cutrightjm The issue with the tracking ad likely applies to AWS too (I didn't check, but my ad blocker prevents the AWS logo from loading). IMO a weak argument (when it comes to downvoting), though, since tracking is part of how things work here, as clearly stated in SE's Privacy Policy.
@FaheemMitha sample size of 1, so the scientist in me won't let me extrapolate much. And I'm not a member of any Epson Laserjet usergroups so I don't even have much anecdata to share. I think I heard of one other person using a laserjet for quite a while (over 10 years), so ... plausible?
I do not have the printer any more, and miss it. Printers these days! /o\
@FaheemMitha I'm sure TeX-produced exams would have looked amazing -- much better than the ASCII-based ones we produced, but it I was just the low-skilled low-paid laborer who knew enough to get logged in, mangle C code to produce new tests, get them printed, pick them up, then (later) help grade them. I thought it was pretty nifty for the time. Since the exams were low-level / required classes, I suspect the urge to cheat was high, and this technique made (direct) cheating impossible.
@JeffSchaller what about printers these days? I've been using an HP laserjet at home for 7 years now, and it's pretty good, and good as new. But I don't have crazy needs.
> Total Pages Printed: 11908 Total Input Jams: 2 Total Output Jams: 0 Total Cartridge Jams: 0 Narrow Media Page Count: 54 Pages per Job: 2.65
@AndrasDeak I also don't have crazy needs -- we needed one when the kids were doing remote school and I got to print homework papers left & right. It's just a consumer-level inkjet. But this one has a fax machine, a scanner, and something else I don't need. Plus its network cards falls off the wifi network regularly despite several efforts on my part to keep it alive from the outside. This printer replaced a previous inkjet which had some sort of ignominous death.
Whew! They were nearly giving away inkjet printers when I bought this one. I want to say it was in the $50-$80 range. They stopped hiding the fact that they made money on the cartridges.
I'll see how mad I am at this one's ethernet abilities and start saving up for a real printer.