• @cmbabul
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      541 year ago

      I trust me to not steal from me, I do not trust me to write good code

      • Rostby
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        91 year ago

        My code does exactly what I programmed it to do, not what I want it to do

  • @marcos
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    551 year ago

    Trust the author? Are you crazy? Do you have any idea how many dumb mistakes I’ve caught the author doing?

  • @[email protected]
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    371 year ago

    To avoid running code that might steal your data for profit, only run official code that will still your data for profit.

    • @technojamin
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      71 year ago

      If you have a common folder that you clone projects to (like OP’s ~/coding), then that checkbox lets you trust that whole folder easily when this pop up comes up.

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        I have a coding folder “repos”. It’s on a remote machine though and I get this every time I connect to my code folder using a new remote host. So annoying!

    • at_an_angle
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      31 year ago

      I don’t trust anybody. Hell, I don’t even trust myself. 🧛🏻‍♂️

  • Margot Robbie
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    111 year ago

    In general, drunk me is the last person I would ever trust with literally anything.

    It’s like waking up in the morning and reading your own drunk text messages.

  • z3rOR0ne
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    101 year ago

    What is this, a VSCode message? I use NeoVim on Linux and can only vaguely recall such a message from a time long ago…in a galaxy far far away…

    • meow
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      251 year ago

      Average Neovim user (I use Neovim btw)

    • @agent_flounder
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      111 year ago

      Yeah vscode.

      Today’s stupid question: are vim and neovim not the same thing? I just type vi (ancient habit) and use whatever it is that executes. (I can go search but interacting here is more fun lol)

      • Dhs92
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        81 year ago

        I believe neovim is just a fork of vim that’s still updated and has support for more modern features.

        • @9point6
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          31 year ago

          FWIW I think vim is also still updated, there was a release this year I believe

            • @9point6
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              41 year ago

              oh… oh shit. That had somehow slipped my mind

              :(

              • @[email protected]
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                41 year ago

                Yeah, it doesn’t make a lot of sense. People talk about “when Linus dies”, and obviously that will be devastating, but in my mind Bram just was. I wish I’d made a point of meeting him, or at least sending him an email to say thanks. Not for vim specifically, though I will probably use it until my fingers quit working. As with countess others, Bram inspired me to learn about ICCF Holland, and from there I had the privilege of supporting a child in Uganda through school. That’s what I’d want to thank him for. And vim.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Neovim is better in many ways, and because it has lua support, it’s so much easier to write plugins for it. So there are thousands of plugins right now, and entire neovim distributions that are configured to work like an IDE, like Lazyvim for example.

        https://www.lazyvim.org/

        I’m a huge fan and I have written plugins myself since it’s easy and rewarding.

        But on the server, I don’t bother installing neovim. Ordinary vim is fine for simple editing tasks. But if you want a customized experience to replace VS Code on your computer, you want neovim and not vim.

      • z3rOR0ne
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        31 year ago

        Neovim is a fork of Vim. It uses Lua for configuration instead of the original Vim’s VimScript, but still has a lot of interoperability with original Vim plugins and configuration options.

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    Random question… RPI, in my jargon, stands for role-play intensive, and it’s a category of MUD engines… are you working on such a project? Because I’m probably in the commit history, and that’d tickle me.

    • @Boxman753
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      71 year ago

      Something that appears in Visual Studio Code, and i assume that in Visual Studio as well.