xzqtlmn

joined 1 year ago
[–] xzqtlmn 36 points 1 year ago (4 children)

To be more specific, fractional-reserve banking system creates this giant pyramid scheme, not capitalism per se.

[–] xzqtlmn 2 points 1 year ago

Is that it? I've been trying to figuring it for quite a while and it seems so obvious after you said it. I do know that bolds and all caps being used for emphasis, never thought about that italics in the same light, or, I supposed, soft emphasis.

Thanks!!

[–] xzqtlmn 2 points 1 year ago

If we look at the signature expectEqual(expected: anytype, actual: @TypeOf(expected)) !void, notice that the second arg's type depends on the first arg's type.

To avoid using @as coercion, we can just swap the passing arguments. comptime_int can be inferred as i64, not the other way around. And that makes sense because literal values are unsized.

[–] xzqtlmn 2 points 1 year ago

Many reasons! Here are a few:

  • Understand technical materials better and faster. (Primary)
  • Not missing out English conversations in my country.
  • Defending myself in English arguments.

I wish my English were as good as my Mandarin. Have been practicing on Reddit for more than a year and have improved a lot since then! But still lack some basic language sense and find it challenging to express abstract concepts precisely and concisely.

ps: hmm... lemmy.world server kind of unstable

 

As far as I can tell, italics are used as an alternative to quotes or double quotes. However, there is one usage that perplexes me: when they're used on auxiliary verbs. For example,

  • I didn’t even know she had a boy friend.
  • Oh my god, they really can write!
  • If you can do that, you should.
  • But what I can guarantee is that...

I've seen this kind of writing on Reddit and Lemmy for quite a while, but still can't grasp it: when and how?