"Bullet hell" game where you control beloved penguin Tux and must defeat an evil mutant Window.
Css that styles html as the original plain markdown text
You'll find both the less and css version.
What is a topic?
A topic, in the Topics API, is a subject a user is interested in as evidenced by the websites they visit.
Topics are a signal to help ad tech platforms select relevant ads. Unlike third-party cookies, this information is shared without revealing further information about the user themself or the user's browsing activity.
The Topics API allows third parties, such as ad tech platforms, to observe and then access topics of interest to a user. For example, the API might suggest the topic "Fiber & Textile Arts" for a user who visits the website knitting.example.
Kübler-Ross model
A PHP extension providing "time travel" and "time freezing" capabilities, inspired by ruby timecop gem.
In computer science, the ostrich algorithm is a strategy of ignoring potential problems on the basis that they may be exceedingly rare. It is named after the ostrich effect which is defined as "to stick one's head in the sand and pretend there is no problem". It is used when it is more cost-effective to allow the problem to occur than to attempt its prevention.
n=1;w=$(look .|egrep "^\w{5}$"|shuf|head -1);for i in {1..6};do read -p"$((n++))? " g;for i in $(seq 0 ${#g});do l=${g:$i:1};[[ $l == ${w:$i:1} ]]&&printf "\e[42m$l\e[0m"||printf "$l";done;echo;[[ "$g" == "$w" ]]&&break;grep --color=always "[$w]" <<<"$g";done;echo ans:\ $wgit-cliff is a command-line tool (written in Rust) that provides a highly customizable way to generate changelogs from git history.
It supports using custom regular expressions to alter changelogs which are mostly based on conventional commits. With a single configuration file, a wide variety of formats can be applied for a changelog, thanks to the Jinja2/Django-inspired template engine.
More information and examples can be found in the GitHub repository.In economics, the Jevons paradox (/ˈdʒɛvənz/; sometimes Jevons effect) occurs when technological progress increases the efficiency with which a resource is used (reducing the amount necessary for any one use), but the falling cost of use induces increases in demand enough that resource use is increased, rather than reduced.[1][2][3] Governments, both historical and modern, typically expect that energy efficiency gains will lower energy consumption, rather than expecting the Jevons paradox.[4]
Diablo
Your new, lightweight, JavaScript framework.
Mêmes bureaux que chez Kimex