I actually made three new friends on new years eve completely through mentioning Linux. We were at a party and I had a really bad year last year so I was rusty in the “talking to people” department, the few people I knew there, who are indie games devs that don’t use Linux, said something (can’t remember exactly what) that made me reply with a Linux joke and those three people moved their chairs closer to me with a “ooooh, a linux nerd, let’s fucking go” energy. We went on such a nerd dive that they party host told us that we aren’t allowed to talk Linux anymore or we’d have to leave.
We talked a lot more through the night and had to really concentrate to not get thrown out, haha.
Private members aren’t actively blocked from external access; they’re passively marked “Access prohibited”.
That means that rather than being unable to find the members of a class, C programmers simply can’t pick up on the signals telling them that they’re not wanted.
Linux user here. What’s a friend?
I actually made three new friends on new years eve completely through mentioning Linux. We were at a party and I had a really bad year last year so I was rusty in the “talking to people” department, the few people I knew there, who are indie games devs that don’t use Linux, said something (can’t remember exactly what) that made me reply with a Linux joke and those three people moved their chairs closer to me with a “ooooh, a linux nerd, let’s fucking go” energy. We went on such a nerd dive that they party host told us that we aren’t allowed to talk Linux anymore or we’d have to leave.
We talked a lot more through the night and had to really concentrate to not get thrown out, haha.
I get this, in my own house. We need speakeasy for linux.
It’s a class that’s allowed to access another class’s private members. Obviously Linus doesn’t have any, because he codes in C.
i think you are mistaking
friendswith theboyfriendsclassPrivate members aren’t actively blocked from external access; they’re passively marked “Access prohibited”.
That means that rather than being unable to find the members of a class, C programmers simply can’t pick up on the signals telling them that they’re not wanted.
(Fellow C programmers: I’m joking. :D)
I searched the web and found this article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friends
Just like many other good distros, Friends ended when the larger one ate the smaller ones.
Hey Siri, go to sleep.
It’s a user group
It’s a second user account on your machine. Of course, you don’t put them in the sudoers file.
That would be reported.
Friends don’t let friends be root.
Another contributor who doesn’t have wildly differing political ideals from your own, I think?
Bots?
Friend here, what’s a linux?