It doesn't.
I dislike the look of Droid Serif. I use Droid Sans as my UI font on my netbook (running Ubuntu), though. I'll certainly compare them when the Ubuntu font is released.
Note that font rendering differs massively between distributions. I prefer Ubuntu's softer (OS X -style) look best. Others might prefer Fedora's crisp (Windows-style) rendering.
I think Real World Haskell might help you with that, and after that, The Road to Mathematics and Logic.
He only needs to offer the ffmpeg sources is he has made any changes to them.
I used Consolas for ages, but now switched back to DejaVu Mono, mostly because it's thinner horizontally.
Classic strawman.
The original post was about Perl 6, though.
If you use the operator, it's (hopefully) safe to assume you know what it does. Then you should also know what interleaving the operator between the list elements does. Which is exactly what the reduction does. I don't…
Tried it, liked it, will use again.
Thanks, good to know.
Does the regular Ruby use RubySpec when you run "make test" or such? Perl 6 does separate the specification from the implementations.
It doesn't.
I dislike the look of Droid Serif. I use Droid Sans as my UI font on my netbook (running Ubuntu), though. I'll certainly compare them when the Ubuntu font is released.
Note that font rendering differs massively between distributions. I prefer Ubuntu's softer (OS X -style) look best. Others might prefer Fedora's crisp (Windows-style) rendering.
I think Real World Haskell might help you with that, and after that, The Road to Mathematics and Logic.
He only needs to offer the ffmpeg sources is he has made any changes to them.
I used Consolas for ages, but now switched back to DejaVu Mono, mostly because it's thinner horizontally.
Classic strawman.
The original post was about Perl 6, though.
If you use the operator, it's (hopefully) safe to assume you know what it does. Then you should also know what interleaving the operator between the list elements does. Which is exactly what the reduction does. I don't…
Tried it, liked it, will use again.
Thanks, good to know.
Does the regular Ruby use RubySpec when you run "make test" or such? Perl 6 does separate the specification from the implementations.