Got it, this completely made sense after your explanation and a second look. Also before I saw this example I hadn’t thought about being able to pass arrays and tuples as generic parameters types. Thanks
Spain here… How and what area are you referring to? Internet, Cell Phone Towers, Everything was down, no one was accepting credit cards in my neighborhood. The only thing they were accepting were IOU’s (if you knew the store owner) and Euros.
interesting, thanks for the tip. I’ll check into this, did you seek out companies that offered this specifically? Or did a company happen to offer it after you applied for the position?
cool site, thx!
Yeah, I would recommend having a basic understanding of the language first.
US citizen here living in Spain. Any good tips on how to get a job in the EU if I don’t have residency? (I’m here with my wife who is on a student visa) I have had a few recruiters reach out, and some good interest when I have pinged some companies on linkedin but no one is able to sponsor a work visa. Maybe I’m looking in the wrong country.
Thanks! Yeah, I learned that early on… I am in Spain and people use coger and recoger all the time. There is a similar saying using “to take” in English which has the same connotation - to take it. (Basically to get f–ked)
wtf, lol that must be some damn good butta!
I think there are a lot of misconceptions about what federated means. IMHO, it would be really cool if there were an easy way to share and remove a profile across instances that wasn’t stored on a server, and it was yours and yours alone to do with what you like.
The city government takes care of the paper work, everyone needs one to get essential services in Spain and it has to be renewed every year or so. (The site below specifies expats, but everyone needs one)
Here is some more information:
https://www.thinkspain.com/information/moving-to-spain/what-is-the-padron-and-how-to-register-on-it
From that site:
If you are an expat living in Spain, it’s important to get registered with your local town hall on the padrón.The Padrón is essentially a register of the local population of a town or city in Spain. In Spanish it’s full name is Certificado de Empadronamiento. It is the certificate that confirms your address, your connection with the town/city, and your official residency in that area. This register allows the town hall to track the population and calculate the resources that should be allocated.
Where I live in Spain this is exactly the case, it’s called a Padrón, and pretty much everyone adheres to it. Without it it’s impossible to do most any business in Spain.
And very soon facebook as well…
and very soon Facebook as well…
This, my altruism has it’s limits
Ah cool, I have used them in the past for laptops and my switch, but I didn’t realize they also cover appliances and a bunch of other categories.
Great point. Think of how incredible it would be if you could go on line and get manuals to fix any part of anything you own from a PS5 to a Refrigerator, to a Rivan Truck including all the protocols, chip sets, ect… Or just explore them to see how things work, I’m sure a lot of great inventions and ideas came about from people tinkering with and exploring manuals like these. Anymore these are considered “top secret” and you have to reverse engineer anything to figure out how it works. I think this speaks more to the fact that the things you “buy” these days aren’t really considered yours. You are borrowing the IP to use for a fee and if it breaks, tough shit. Throw it out and get a new one.
Ah, good point. I do have a monitor with HDR, but I never really paid attention to it in the past. AFAIK unfortunately there isn’t really any good support for HDR without a lot of messing with the window server. It seems to be in the works though by various groups.
Good luck with that…
I gather from your explanation, that in order to tell before hand whether or not a type will be inferred, you really need to examine the code and see how things are being handled, and optimized out. (And even then you still may not know) Interesting, thanks.