Do you notice anything wrong with my config? https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/30495
Do you notice anything wrong with my config? https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/30495
Do you notice anything wrong with my config? https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/30495
pavucontrol
probably the best option given your distro. Go with that.
Ain’t that the truth. But I love the workflow they offer. You don’t have to go looking for new windows. You can easily pin applications to virtual desktops and I prefer the multihead model they use over the one used by gnome or KDE.
You can’t expect the user to have one.
It’s only useful during development there.
Bullshit!
module/__init__.py
:
__all__ = ["foo", "bar"]
module/foo.py
:
def foo():
print("foo")
module/bar.py
:
def bar():
print("bar")
module/baz.py
:
def baz():
print("baz")
main.py
:
from module import *
from module import baz
if __name__ == "__main__":
print("main")
foo.foo()
bar.bar()
baz.baz()
Output:
$ python main.py
main
foo
bar
baz
No errors, warnings or anything.
Renders correctly for me
You could guard it.
__init__.py
:
_GUARD_SOME_UTILITY_FUNCTION = True
from .utilities import SomeUtilityFunction
utilities.py
:
def SomeUtilityFunction():
if not _GUARD_SOME_UTILITY_FUNCTION:
raise SomeException("Helpful error message")
Take this with a grain of salt, as I’m typing this on my phone and haven’t actually tried it.
Alternatively there’s the import-guard
package on PyPI. No idea if it’s any good, though. Just something a quick search brought up.
Edit:
Ok, I tried my suggestion and it doesn’t work.
That’s not correct. __all__
is not a whitelist. It is only the list used for
from module import *
If you have a module with submodules foo
, bar
and baz
and __all__ = ["foo", "bar"]
it will not prevent you from importing baz
manually. It just won’t do it automatically.
Programmer moment.
Accidentally flashed a live image (PCBSD, IIRC) onto my 1TB external HDD instead of the thumb drive. Lost years of collected music and movies that night. I learned two things:
dd
is nicknamed ‘disk destroyer’ for good reason.But why would you post a screenshot of the gallery displaying the photo if you can just upload the photo?
It’s a pain to get anything but MacOS to run on those damn things.
You can either try to contact the seller and ask for the password or just erase the UEFI settings by shorting some jumper or something. There should be instructions how to do that for your specific model.
If it happened on Windows it would be. Currently it’s a driver issue.
Hey. I’m an unhappy owner of an ALC4080, too. I have issues with the microphone on mine. I don’t recall output issues. But I vaguely remember having issues with the sample rate. 48k was iffy, no matter what but once I told pipewire to use 44.1k that resolved itself.
Had that experience with Borderlands 3. Obviously it’s entirely possible that Borderlands 3 usage of DX12 is just borked in a way that affects Windows worse than Vulkan.
DXVK on Windows seems to be unsupported, but a thing nevertheless: https://www.reddit.com/r/pcgaming/comments/mlfcsc/a_guide_to_dxvk_on_windows/
On Windows you may be right. A buddy I game with regularly has had trouble with DX12 games crashing randomly.
On Linux they run just fine and frequently perform better than DX11 on Linux or DX12 on Windows.
The
ActivationPolicy
I added in an attempt to replicate whatwg-quick
produces, as I recall.