Most people never type a full file name on the command line, they normally just use file name completion.
And if they happen to have a lot of files that are only distinguished by some single character, what would be so difficult about typing that one character then?
Because you would need to know the code for å in all kb layouts, on all OS’s,
WTF!? Why would you ever need to know that!?
No, it isn’t. Why would it be?
Incompetence didn’t go anywhere.
Now that’s certainly true, but the beauty of open source software is that we can fix bugs when we encounter them.
Why not just use SFTP?
We have Unicode these days: blåhaj
We have Unicode these days: blåhaj
Hansjörg Wyss
I settled with Debian because ‘apt-get dis-upgrade’, of course.
A friend showed me an early version of Debian, probably sometime around 1996, and it was immediately obvious that this was the way. It’s been Debian for me ever since.
This includes the Linux greybeards too.
I never switched to Windows, but switched directly from AmigaOS to Linux, in 1994.
I’d recommend starting out by reading a very biased but well researched and factually correct book, which will give you invaluable information about how it all became the way it is today, which will make it possible for you to discern who lies about what and why today:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_People's_History_of_the_United_States
Someone
We have now selected you to be that person.
Someone said inns and taverns,
They’re just called pubs nowadays and many of them are still in business, with drink, food and music downstairs, and rooms for sleeping upstairs.
The one in my neighbourhood is newly reopened and serves fancy craft beer these days, but the basics are actually pretty much unchanged since a tavern first opened in that house sometime in the 1640s.
They’re just called pubs nowadays and many of them are still in business, with drink, food and music downstairs, and rooms for sleeping upstairs.
The one in my neighbourhood is newly reopened and serves fancy craft beer these days, but the basics are actually pretty much unchanged since a tavern first opened in that house sometime in the 1640s.
price charming
I like this.
Yup, the lab could tell a difference!
Awesome!
The amount of heat reflected/absorbed between the two sides is trivially small.
Your particular choice of wording here makes me very curious: Do you mean that there really was a measurable difference (which was trivially small)?
There’s really no reason for you to be rude.