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I try to get on helix from time to time but the lack of built in terminal emulator stops me every time. What is the suggested story of going from location in compiler output in a different tab to the editor? In vs code it is just one ctrl click away.


Since it is a tui editor, a terminal split


The question is less about the split but about making my terminal (kitty) navigate into hx when I click on locations in compiler output?


This looks perfect for my command line go app. I wanted to add config wizard all along.

One question though: app is primarily distributed through docker. Can docker app open a window somehow on all platforms? How?


Micromouse competition is exactly about this. There are plenty of algorithms published. Some version of flood fill is the most popular I think.


My friends work on such a tool for many years: https://www.animatron.com/studio

It is an online HTML5 animation editor.


Police officer told me it’s $12-$20/dose of meth. Didn’t verify.


My friend is a cop in an area that deals with a lot of meth and opioid issues. I asked him this and his answer was that it's usually in easy multiples. $15, $20, $25 etc. I suppose this makes sense, given it's an all cash business.


Is there a web endpoint?

I’m looking for something exactly like polar. IPad support is a must for me though. Browser based access could work. Meanwhile stuck with mendeley...


It's a good alternative to Mendeley I think. No iPad support but maybe in the future when we get a web version working.

No Electron on iPad... :-/


Excellent app! And great music. Had so much fan playing it instead of sleeping last night.

There’s only one thing I wish (musician here): slightly bigger visual distance before strong beats? Or make a circle a itty bit larger? This is the only reason I might prefer musical notation for sight reading.

Technical question: can you tell about latency? What’s the typical? Is it consistent across devices?

PS now I have to beat this thing on hard...


Is there any effect on our thinking that comes from HoTT? I heard this is exactly the kind of problems it tries to solve.


It seems that the author completely disregards the modern tendency to treat boxes as commodities. While pondering a "what's going to start on this particular machine" question is interesting in the "old world", it is hardly a question anyone asks when your fleet starts to be measured in tens of thousands of cloud instances.


No, his issue is that because others choose to do so he has to do so because the fad of the year is tramping all over the alternatives.


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