That's because in Italian, like in many other European languages, you use en-dashes to separate parenthetical clauses. The en-dash is used with space, the em-dash (mostly) without space and that's why it's longer. On old typewriters they were frequently written as "--" and "---" respectively. So yes, it's mostly an English thing. Stick to your trattinos, they're nice!
The commands in their example are not equivalent. The ps | grep thing searches the full command line including argument while ps -C (and, presumably, the psc thing) just returns the process name.
Should you for some reason want to do the former, this is easiest done using:
pgrep -u root -f nginx
which exists on almost all platforms, with the notable exception of AIX.
Their other slightly convoluted example is:
psc 'socket.state == established && socket.dstPort == uint(443)'
Many new tools appear because people don't know how to use the existing tools or they think the existing tool is too complicated. In time the new tool becomes just as, or more, complicated than the old tool. Because there is a reason the old tool is complicated, which is that the problem requires complexity.
The stated objectives for this administration was to be understood as: Weaken USD. Cheaper oil. Weaken NATO.
This should surprise no one. Undermining NATO fits the now well known negotiation style perfectly, you can try to get a good deal from allies to put it back together, while simultaneously playing those allies against an alternative and opposite deal with Russia for doing business again. The latter has the added bonus of even cheaper oil. Neither is good for Ukraine and Taiwan unfortunately.
> you can try to get a good deal from allies to put it back together
There is no un-breaking this egg. Only the most deluded people in the world don't realize that there is no trust to be exchanged, for many generations at least.
The most universal bad outcome is that many people had predicted, we are now living in a new age of accelerated nuclear proliferation thanks to the loss of Pax Americana.
Does it really matter what is illegal if it is pardoned?
Starting insurrection to overthrow election? Pardoned. Killing police officer? Pardoned. Ordering contract killings? Pardoned. Large scale drug smuggling operation to the US? Pardoned.
Brand anyone who follows the law as a criminal and make sure to have them fired, and you can even ignore the constition that says power to regulate trade lies with the senate and enough of civil society might just decide to play along.
This is almost exactly what git does, except it's a million times faster. Every commit is one of those copies, and you can instantly jump to any one of them using git checkout.
If you like this mental model, you'll feel right at home with git. You will love git reflog.
What is the argument here? Does it still hold if you s/rebase/comments/g ?
Of course a readable code history aids in debugging. Just as comments and indentation do. None of these are technically necessary, but still a good idea.
Of course running the rebase command doesn't guarantee a readable commit history, but it's hard to craft commits without it. Each and every commit on linux-kernel has been rebased probably a dozen times.
This looks like regular hydrolysis, same thing that happens to shoe soles after any number of years.
I don't think it's fair to make fun of the cable specifications, seems to me they held up just fine despite the jacket disintegrating. The article doesn't mention the error rate, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was still zero.
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