*peddling
inedible?
This code only does the most basic and naive regex filtering that even a beginner XSS course's inputs would work against. With the Node example code and input string: <p>Hello <scr<script>ipt>alert(1)</scr<script>ipt>…
The first example in the "Sorting in Practice" section appears to be broken. The text makes it seem like the list should be sorted in-memory and then written to disk sorted, but the example un-sorts the list when it's…
Have you considered using Tailscale to get around the same-network requirement?
Sounds like the problem you have here is that `grep` is aliased to `ripgrep`. ripgrep isn't intended to be a drop-in replacement for POSIX grep, and the subjectively easier usage of ripgrep can never replace grep's…
For more context to whoever is interested, the dialogue following the quote goes like this: Studio Ghibli producer, Suzuki: "So, what is your goal?" ML Developer: "Well, we would like to build a machine that can draw…
*peddling
inedible?
This code only does the most basic and naive regex filtering that even a beginner XSS course's inputs would work against. With the Node example code and input string: <p>Hello <scr<script>ipt>alert(1)</scr<script>ipt>…
The first example in the "Sorting in Practice" section appears to be broken. The text makes it seem like the list should be sorted in-memory and then written to disk sorted, but the example un-sorts the list when it's…
Have you considered using Tailscale to get around the same-network requirement?
Sounds like the problem you have here is that `grep` is aliased to `ripgrep`. ripgrep isn't intended to be a drop-in replacement for POSIX grep, and the subjectively easier usage of ripgrep can never replace grep's…
For more context to whoever is interested, the dialogue following the quote goes like this: Studio Ghibli producer, Suzuki: "So, what is your goal?" ML Developer: "Well, we would like to build a machine that can draw…