• 1 Post
  • 16 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: July 18th, 2023

help-circle

  • The answer depends on the country. In the US, review the Bank Secrecy Act and anti-money laundering (AML) regulations. In Canada, there is the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act (PCMLTFA) regulations and also the CRA requiring the individuals and businesses retain their records for up to six years.

    if there’s some sort of way around this either with a lawyer or federal form or something.

    Very unlikely.



    • Sifu – Steam Deck Verified – Very Positive Rating
    • Gotham Knights – Steam Deck Playable – Mixed Rating
    • High on Life – Steam Deck Verified – Very Positive Rating
    • Blacktail – Steam Deck Verified – Very Positive Rating
    • Astral Ascent – Steam Deck Verified – Very Positive Rating
    • Diluvian Ultra – Not Steam Deck Rated (but works great!) – Very Positive Rating
    • Universe For Sale – Steam Deck Verified – Very Positive Rating
    • This Means Warp – Steam Deck Playable – Mostly Positive Rating






  • command! -range -nargs=1 PadColumns call PadColumns(<line1>, <line2>, <args>)
    
    function! PadColumns(start, end, columns)
        execute a:start.','.a:end.'s/\(.*\)\zs\s*$/\='.'repeat(" ", a:columns - len(submatch(1)))'
    endfunction
    

    Use by typing in Normal mode :PadColumns 20. This will add spaces after the line or selected lines to the column you specify (in this case, 20).

    You could probably improve this by getting the length of the longest line and so you dont need to specify the specific column to add spaces to (20), and instead just add say 5 spaces after longest line for all lines.



  • mrbn@lemmy.catoLinux@lemmy.mlTIL
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    28
    ·
    1 year ago

    Reminds me of the “Op” wars on IRC. All users would be given @ status and the point was to kick everyone before you got kicked. Writing scripts for this was my first “taste” at programming.






  • Have you tried setting a breakpoint and seeing if it hits? Assuming the app you are debugging is just a Console.WriteLine("Hello World"); and no breakpoints are set, the app will execute, output hello world, and terminate. Which means you wouldn’t see anything happen in VS Code.

    If you are super new to all this, I would suggest you look for videos/articles on how to debug using visual studio code as they may provide some insights or concepts you may not already know.