@properlypurple@jon Submitting it online is OK, I think. The nonsense the US people have to go through is absolutely insane though.
I do remember seeing my parents slave over the tax returns back in Sweden in what must have been the early 80's. That was gone by the time I got my first paycheck (probably in 1990)
@jon Same here in Singapore. And if you want to make an amendment (like an extra deduction), you can log in to a webpage and fill it in.
I just checked with an Indian colleague, and it was explained to me that they do it the same way. The employer send the information to the tax authority and everything is handled automatically. India also has different states, and they manage to do it where the US fails.
@galdor A const ssh_key * is equivalent to struct ssh_key_struct **. In both cases it's a pointer to a pointer to a struct.
The way to think about it is that the "pointer to ssh struct" is the object itself. The fact that it's a pointer is irrelevant. When you declare a ssh_key * all you do is create a pointer to this object type (which happens to be a pointer).
@clacke@valhalla Of course you eat pizza with knife and fork. Now of course, Swedish pizzas are often soft, doughey and crap, so you wouldn't be able to eat them with you hands even if you wanted to.
Burgers with utensils just make sense, when it's those massive ones at restaurants where there is so much stuff on it that they don't even put the top bread on because it's just fall off.
We'll see if things change when people start learning on EV's. I barely touch the brake at all when I drive mine. There are two paddle switches on the steering wheel where I can control the amount of braking from the motor, and I can use it to come to a complete stop.
@samebchase@akkartik the Wikipedia article on the for loop claims the first appearance was in Algol 58. Apparently that in turn came from a really early German language called superplan. I don't think this language was ever implemented.
But the term "for" indicating that a computation is done for all values of the some criteria is quite well established since long, I think.
You may call me stupid, but I didn't realise until just now that the term subscripting of arrays comes from the mathematical convention of the writing indexes in subscript after the the variable.
I was casually reading some documentation on how to compile Fortran programs on an 1130, as one does, where they mentioned array subscripting and I suddenly realised it. How could I have missed this all this time?
@koakuma Another example is the lisp-binary package for Common Lisp. If you look at the documentation you can see an example using the DEFBINARY macro. https://quickdocs.org/lisp-binary