the mechanisms by which that information is being conveyed have been shown to be addictive as well, no?
you can "Reduce Motion" and "Prefer Cross-Fade Transitions" under accessibility. Not sure if that's what is being referred to though.
I feel like that commenter was a little harsh with that statement - I will say however that it has caught some flak as a source of truth. There are quite a few standards (principally, original jazz compositions by jazz…
I mean yeah, I agree, I'm a longtime player. I appreciate DCSS's in-game discoverability. I find wikis useful for more in-depth explanation of game mechanics though. How combat rolls are calculated, etc. Ideally a wiki…
I haven't played DCSS regularly since probably v0.24 or v0.25, so things may have changed - but if I recall correctly, it was not kept up to date very well, character guides are flat-out wrong, etc...
Andrew Plotkin is one of the best IF authors there is, in my opinion. Highly recommended the following: Spider and Web: https://ifdb.org/viewgame?id=2xyccw3pe0uovfad Shade: https://ifdb.org/viewgame?id=hsfc7fnl40k4a30q…
TuxGuitar is fine for me.
? Every exam I ever took for my BS in EE was pen and paper. 2015-2020.
That sounds like an incredibly unsettling experience.
You can right-click anywhere in the VLC window to bring up the context menu, which has a 'View' tab which let's you toggle it back.
Instead of being snippy, you could click two links and find yourself looking at the entire source code of a web browser written fully in Common Lisp by the team putting out the article. How's that for a snippet!
the mechanisms by which that information is being conveyed have been shown to be addictive as well, no?
you can "Reduce Motion" and "Prefer Cross-Fade Transitions" under accessibility. Not sure if that's what is being referred to though.
I feel like that commenter was a little harsh with that statement - I will say however that it has caught some flak as a source of truth. There are quite a few standards (principally, original jazz compositions by jazz…
I mean yeah, I agree, I'm a longtime player. I appreciate DCSS's in-game discoverability. I find wikis useful for more in-depth explanation of game mechanics though. How combat rolls are calculated, etc. Ideally a wiki…
I haven't played DCSS regularly since probably v0.24 or v0.25, so things may have changed - but if I recall correctly, it was not kept up to date very well, character guides are flat-out wrong, etc...
Andrew Plotkin is one of the best IF authors there is, in my opinion. Highly recommended the following: Spider and Web: https://ifdb.org/viewgame?id=2xyccw3pe0uovfad Shade: https://ifdb.org/viewgame?id=hsfc7fnl40k4a30q…
TuxGuitar is fine for me.
? Every exam I ever took for my BS in EE was pen and paper. 2015-2020.
That sounds like an incredibly unsettling experience.
You can right-click anywhere in the VLC window to bring up the context menu, which has a 'View' tab which let's you toggle it back.
Instead of being snippy, you could click two links and find yourself looking at the entire source code of a web browser written fully in Common Lisp by the team putting out the article. How's that for a snippet!