That “gradual decline” is an artifact of your maths, in which you're gradually changing the weight of recent years. Consider a sequence with an extreme drop-off: 100, 100, 100, 100, 40. Taking averages of all the…
Some of my stuff is in Raku, which indeed supports Unicode operators. But other coding isn't, and it'd be nice to use ligature fonts for those.
Thanks. I'd previously tried and failed a couple of times to get a NeoVim gui installed, mainly because I wanted to try one of those ligature fonts that display -> as → and the like. There seemed to be a few different…
I avoid that by replying inline, discarding the history of multiple-quoted emails from top-repliers. Everybody else uses Outlook, but nobody has yet complained. For sending emails with formatting (italics, headings), I…
One of my main reasons for using Mutt is precisely the opposite: with mbsync I have copies of all emails on my laptop, so I can read, search, and compose emails when I don't have an internet connection.
In what way doesn't it work? This is with my ISP's DNS (using which I can visit https://www.lancaster.ac.uk/ in a browser): $ host -t a lancaster.ac.uk lancaster.ac.uk has address 148.88.65.80 and this is with…
That “gradual decline” is an artifact of your maths, in which you're gradually changing the weight of recent years. Consider a sequence with an extreme drop-off: 100, 100, 100, 100, 40. Taking averages of all the…
Some of my stuff is in Raku, which indeed supports Unicode operators. But other coding isn't, and it'd be nice to use ligature fonts for those.
Thanks. I'd previously tried and failed a couple of times to get a NeoVim gui installed, mainly because I wanted to try one of those ligature fonts that display -> as → and the like. There seemed to be a few different…
I avoid that by replying inline, discarding the history of multiple-quoted emails from top-repliers. Everybody else uses Outlook, but nobody has yet complained. For sending emails with formatting (italics, headings), I…
One of my main reasons for using Mutt is precisely the opposite: with mbsync I have copies of all emails on my laptop, so I can read, search, and compose emails when I don't have an internet connection.
In what way doesn't it work? This is with my ISP's DNS (using which I can visit https://www.lancaster.ac.uk/ in a browser): $ host -t a lancaster.ac.uk lancaster.ac.uk has address 148.88.65.80 and this is with…