

Say the line, Joyce
Say the line, Joyce
Sadly people literally write that and mean it. See the other reply:
They really don’t seem to be bothered by it.
Not sure what you mean - “Mario and Princess Beach” is obviously peak cinema
Sorry, classic case of Poe’s law! There are plenty of people who write what you said without any sarcasm, so without any indicators there’s no way to know.
If it’s only in the type checker, can IDEs/editors correctly show the type information of inferred types then?
Yep, and some (e.g. Pycharm) do. They have to be a bit careful with not assuming too much since lots of legacy code is written in fairly terrible ways, so e.g. default parameter values don’t necessarily set the type of their respective parameters, but it’s definitely possible and mostly a choice by the editor/IDE.
Do they call the type checker themselves to retrieve that info?
Depends on the editor! Pycharm is built on a custom engine by Jetbrains, whereas e.g. the Python VS code plugin by Microsoft (Pylance) is based on Microsofts type checker (pyright).
And how do you know that?
Type inference is a feature of the type checker, not of Python itself. I’m fairly sure the type checker that’s being developed by the Astral team will have proper inference, and I’ve also had good experiences with pyright in the past.
Though it doesn’t come close to e.g. Typescript, which is a shame - Python could really use the advanced dynamic type checking features TS has.
Challenge accepted!
Well, or the power of an opening at the top. We really need more data to confirm.
I’ve had good experiences with my Nvidia card on Aurora (same basis as e.g. Bazzite), but HDR is indeed still an issue.
Right now, all you have to do is go to the settings of your non-steam game, go to compatibility, and choose a Proton version. I’m not sure if this change will automate it, but it’s pretty much as easy as it can be already.
There’s really no way to do this without making the whole driver source-available, as there’s no way to update it to a new Kernel without full source access. That’d be great, but the manufacturers will fight tooth-and-nail against that, especially since the drivers can contain trade secrets.
The APIs are part of the Linux Kernel, so you’d be forcing the Kernel to completely change their development policy of internal breakages being allowed. That’s a no-go.
Wat? Producer guy is where it’s at!
Fourteen is a terrible nickname for water