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Saved by uncleflo on November 14th, 2022.
Available in: English, Spanish, French, Italian, German and more Writer’s block. We’ve all been there. Even the most experienced, and well-versed writers and content creators have mind blanks. There’s nothing worse than staring at that blinking cursor for hours on end. And without quality blog posts or articles on your site, your SEO and other marketing strategies can fall short. So how do you beat the brain fatigue and push out content at the scale you need? An AI blog generator. AI writing tools allow you to take an idea and create an entire blog post — in half the time it would have taken you before. Here, we’ll go into some blog best practices and how to properly use an AI blog tool to your advantage.
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Saved by uncleflo on March 28th, 2018.
On this blog, I have several code examples with a grey background like this: some fancy code. All the code examples are contained within <span> tags. But what if a span tag contains a word – say, a path to a file on a Linux server – that is longer than the width of the paragraph (the line width)? How can you force the text inside the span to word wrap? There’s a simple, very useful CSS trick you can use for this: word-wrap: break-word;.
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Saved by uncleflo on December 28th, 2017.
This page demonstrate the FineDiff class (as in “fine granularity diff”) I wrote – starting from scratch – to generate a lossless (won't eat your line breaks), compact opcodes string listing the sequence of atomic actions (copy/delete/insert) necessary to transform one string into another (thereafter referred as the “From” and “To” string). The “To” string can be rebuilt by running the opcodes string on the “From” string. The FineDiff class allows to specify the granularity, and up to character-level granularity is possible, in order to generate the smallest diff possible (at the potential cost of increased CPU cycles.)
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Saved by uncleflo on November 18th, 2011.
For those of you who are still unfamiliar with Unix, I have begun a modest "history of Unix" in diagram form. Several links to other sites enable you to get detailed texts describing different periods, such as for example the famous UNIX Time-Sharing System from Thompson and Ritchie in 1973. Windows History english: To complement the history of Open Systems, here is now the history of Closed Systems: Windows. This always in a diagram form.
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