oscar
nam
is assigned the value returned by input
.
This is not some edge case behavior by the input
function. This is always how function calls work. You can think of it like substituting input('Who are you? ')
with the value returned by it, which is the string typed in by the user in this case.
How did you install neovim? If you installed from source, double check that you followed the instructions, i.e. install build dependencies and then run:
make CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo
sudo make install
Also, double check the version of nvim in your PATH matches:
nvim --version
Drop oh-my-zsh and look for something else to customize your prompt. I like Powerlevel10k but Starship is good too.
C is a pretty simple language and relatively easy to learn. But it's a lot harder to be proficient with.
(Preface: i dont know much about this)
mkdev.h is not available in arch either. I even tried searching the repos with pacman -F mkdev.h
.
Looking up makedev (which I'm assuming is the lib that cpio uses from it) it seems that it is available in sysmacros.h for linux and mkdev.h for solaris, see for example: https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/dri-devel/patch/[email protected]/
So I tried just commenting that include out but got a bunch of other errors about multiple definitions of some enums (defined in cpio.h), and so I gave up.
I don't like GNU either but I went the more free route of BSD instead.
Can't they just use JSDoc?
By the same argument, wouldn't GPL and other copyleft licenses be considered non-free as well since you are not free to do whatever you want with the source? For example, incorporating it into a proprietary project, refusing to provide the source to users upon request, or not disclosing attribution, etc. The latter would even go against the terms of permissive licenses.
Clearly defining what free, and by extension FOSS, means is very relevant.
It seems that no lua is packaged with pandoc-cli (By looking at the package contents of https://archlinux.org/packages/extra/x86_64/pandoc-cli/)
So if I were you I would first try the AUR and see if there's any package there that does.
It's when you open a publicly facing port and map (forward) it to a local port your machine. In this case, it's opened at the vpn provider's public gateway. Otherwise, it would typically be opened in your router instead.
You can then configure your torrent client to listen on that local port that the public port is forwarded to. I think generally the public and the local port are the same number when using VPN.
If you do that, then others have the ability to initiate a connection to you instead of only you being able to initiate the connection to somebody else.
When seeding/leeching to/from someone else, at least one of you needs a port open. So, if you always have one open, you allow yourself to connect to anyone on the network regardless if they have one open or not.
Sorry if I confused you more, I'm not that great at explaining.