> I am and forever will be a fan of the scheme (and now clojure) convention of saying foo->bar to say foo to bar. I just think that's swell. In his book—Lisp in Small Pieces—Christian Quienec suggests using a reversed…
It's called Lindy Effect. It is applicable to some non-perishable things, where mortality rate decreases with time.
SICP language in racket lacks 1+ and -1+ (increment and decrement), last I checked. So it does still need some modification.
Cash payments can already be done anonymously.
It's called prettify-symbols-mode: http://www.modernemacs.com/post/prettify-mode/
Sometimes, people (at least in northern parts of India) tend to use the word as a synonym for "last name" in common parlance. It can be used without an intention to discriminate (though the consequences depend on the…
I think the bulls plough the fields (which are not that holy).
Have you tried Jabber with Conversations or Pix-Art android app? It has end to end encryption (OMEMO), support for sharing media, voice and video calling, multitude of desktop clients, (a less secure) web client etc.…
> I am and forever will be a fan of the scheme (and now clojure) convention of saying foo->bar to say foo to bar. I just think that's swell. In his book—Lisp in Small Pieces—Christian Quienec suggests using a reversed…
It's called Lindy Effect. It is applicable to some non-perishable things, where mortality rate decreases with time.
SICP language in racket lacks 1+ and -1+ (increment and decrement), last I checked. So it does still need some modification.
Cash payments can already be done anonymously.
It's called prettify-symbols-mode: http://www.modernemacs.com/post/prettify-mode/
Sometimes, people (at least in northern parts of India) tend to use the word as a synonym for "last name" in common parlance. It can be used without an intention to discriminate (though the consequences depend on the…
I think the bulls plough the fields (which are not that holy).
Have you tried Jabber with Conversations or Pix-Art android app? It has end to end encryption (OMEMO), support for sharing media, voice and video calling, multitude of desktop clients, (a less secure) web client etc.…