It used to be considered a security risk back in the day. Maybe it just a security “unknown”
It used to be considered a security risk back in the day. Maybe it just a security “unknown”
I do recommend emacs though. It is not the greatest editor, but it is an amazing experience. It is such an amazing experiment, that has an extensive set of different ways of looking at content and code - it will change how you think about coding.
I can’t say that it is, no.
Org-mode is like md but has tables and more. Emacs will even run computation as a party of interpretation. GitHub accepts it in place of markdown.
Not Turkish, but Hot Skull was a great watch. At the risk of speaking on behalf of Turks, I think that the premises run deep into the culture.
Check out this young un, who still has one day hangovers
No jokes: pick a language that is in the market, but has a different design philosophy than your background. Your background includes compiled static, and loose scripting, with strong library tooling, so you have diversity there, so a language in which you have to think differently is the right choice.
I recommend:
I would say that while language constructs are typically English words, they don’t really require English comprehension to learn. That said, the vast majority of programming support, documentation and community are in English, and are not accessible without English comprehension.
Has anyone done any greenhouse automation with hass? I don’t know where to start.