How would you even use discord for that stuff? It sounds way harder than just using the proper tools.
There's a big difference which is that clients have minimal lock in. Reddit has a monopoly over the community while you can easily switch clients with little lost.
Have you tried using descriptive layer names like layer 1, later 2, later 3?
That means that detection was added explicitly because this prank was done enough that it was worth it to add.
Theoretically yes, but I'm having a very hard time even finding peripherals with male lightning ports when I searched out of curiosity, and the few I saw were the same price as this adapter or cheaper. Every single peripheral I found that has a male lightning port uses it for the purpose of making it sit flush against the phone, otherwise it would have made more sense to simply buy a USB-C accessory and use a C to lightning cable. This adapter removes the streamlined nature of those peripherals.
I'm sure there's some rare use case where this adapter makes sense, so I don't literally mean nobody would ever need this in any circumstance, but since the need for it would be so small I think the heightened price makes sense since there would be very little demand.
I was just thinking that sometimes I avoid breaking functions in a file into multiple modules because I don't want to deal with the hassle of switching files. One way to remove that hassle would be to have a way to view all the files in a folder in a single tab with each file appended to the list, so I could scroll through or search all of them in the same tab.
Does VS Code already have an extension like this? If not, is the VS Code extension system flexible enough to implement this feature?
I don't remember the last time I needed to look for a driver on Linux
One of my classes had us design our own 8 bit processor and assembly language. It was a lot of fun designing it. It was like a little puzzle to figure out how to get features into those limitations
After experiencing struts everything else looks great in comparison
I think Java's verbosity has more to do with the culture than the language itself