I’m offended by the inconsistent placement of curly braces.
I’m offended by the inconsistent placement of curly braces.
So…
70% of 35kWh ➡️ 35kWh*0.7 = 24.5kWh
24.5*(60/4.5) ~ 326kW of charging power
Not bad. I mean realistically, on average, you’d get maybe close to 150kW charging. That’s still not bad.
Yes. And many people here doesn’t seem to get that.
I’m not a dev of any kind. I occasionally write some bash and awk scriots to automate some things and if I need some kind of plain text (non-binary) data format I prefer tsv over json.
So why do I still get this? Is it just that many json advocates want to make sure others know json does support other data types than plain string?
I had several tests at the beginning of the script. These tests define the “low-level” functions based the capability of the shell. To test new features I “simply” ran all the necessary commands on the test environments (bash, busybox, toybox+mksh).
The script would error out if some necessary capability was missing from the host system. It also had a feature to switch shell if it found a better one (preferring busybox and its internal tools).
Yeah… It was tedious process. It was one of those “I’ll write a simple script. So simple that it’ll work on almost every posixy shell.”… rest is history.
I would then assume those scripts weren’t written properly to begin with.
But yes, shell scripts should be used (normally) to automate some simple tasks (file copying, backups…) or as an wrapper to exec some other program. I’ve written several shell scripts to automate things on my personal machines.
However shell script can be complex program while at the same time being (somewhat) easy to maintain:
This way at least I don’t break my scripts, when I need to modify a function or some way extend my scripts. Keeping the UNIX philosophy inside shell scripts: let one function do one thing well.
And of course: YMMV. People have wastly different coding standards when it comes to personal little(?) projects.
I once did a sh script that needed (because I wanted a challenge?) to be compatible with vanilla Android shell too. So I needed to test it with regular bash, busybox and mksh+toybox. That was ‘fun’.
I’ve had some initial plans to spllit the code out from that project and develop a “shell” library that would ease building shell scripts that are compatible with different systems… But I bet someone else has already done that.
$() instead of
So much this!
Initially the bug report was shot down by systemd developer Luca Boccassi of Microsoft with:
Emphasis mine.
While MS at least tries to be good guy nowdays, I just can’t trust their code too much.
Gentoo cured my distrohopping
Kinda the same with me, I’ve been using Gentoo the most of my life.
DOS (probably) ➡️ Windows95/98 and MacOS 7/8/9 ➡️ mkLinux ➡️ Gentoo ➡️ Arch Linux ➡️ Gentoo
So yeah. Pretty early on I concluded that Gentoo is the best for me.
Gah. I should have stated “I see what you did there.” instead. ;)
Like 65534 times.
So close to full 16-bit max. So close…
TIL: that exists.
I’ve always thought GOAT stands for Gentleman Of All Trades. I make a wild guess it’s Girl Of All Trades in this case?
That’s a really neat feature.
Well, yeah. Hard drive failure can force a reinstall. And with laptops there isn’t usually another place for a hard drive, from where to restore the system.
Yes. I agreed with you. But I made it sound like something else. Bad wording on my side.
As I’m too Gentoo openrc user. I also use seatd+greetd instead of (e)logind and replacing sysvinit with openrc-init. The availability of choices made me do it!
I would say “finally”, but I’ve given up already.
I don’t see systems booting with systemd in any near future of any dimension. Instead I now run “terribly slow” OpenRC on my systems. Poor me.