was a bit painful
Well that’s an understatement
was a bit painful
Well that’s an understatement
Chile: !chile@feddit.cl
Denmark: !fedditdk@feddit.dk (and its news community !nyheder@feddit.dk)
Norway: !norge@lemmy.world (not very active but technically it had a post last week)
!juegosdemesa@feddit.cl Spanish speaking board game community that’s more active than any English counterparts I could find.
I’ve gotten pretty used to DDG’s interface. I’ll try kagi at some point but I don’t know if I’d use it full time.
It kinda depends what you’re looking for. For technical stuff DDG is much better than Google (I don’t know about kagi) but for local information Google still gives better results. Google seems to return what it thinks you want to search for and not what you actually tell it to so for exact searches it’s always worse. If you’re not sure what you’re looking for Google can be better sometimes.
“C is accessible” is not something I expected to read today
Yeah that’s what I usually do
DuckDuckGo as a default with Google as fallback depending on what I’m looking for. For lemmy the default search of my instance works well enough so haven’t tried external engines.
Where is console.log()?
Also if you go with git instead of github you should use git’s icon
Especially useful when the specific thread is now the first result on Google.
Ok I don’t completely get the use case but that’s…impressive. Thanks for the detailed explanation and good luck moving it forward
I’d ask what I’m looking at here but feel I might regret it
Maybe because you hear your voice every time you speak but rarely in recordings so the difference is more jarring. Most people don’t spend all day looking at a mirror but probably see photos of themselves more often than they hear recordings.
That’s some perfect timing as I came across Kongen Befaler like three days ago. It seems the reddit links also have subtitles which is really useful, thanks. And yeah I’ve also noticed a lot of actors and singers seem to have a more western accent. Duolingo definitely doesn’t prepare you for that.
I’ve been learning Norwegian on and off for some time now. What I always found interesting is how much I can understand from written Swedish and Danish (+ Nynorsk) while still having difficulty with even basic spoken Norwegian if it isn’t the most common Oslo accent.
As a general suggestion then, for something easy I’d go for a Scandinavian language (Danish, Norwegian or Swedish). You only need one of them to kinda understand the others. For something harder Finnish or Estonian is interesting because of the many noun cases but not very useful. I don’t know anything about Asian languages but Korean and Japanese would be next on my list.
That probably depends on your use case. But also what level are you on those other languages? How many do you think you can learn at the same time?
Adult second hand clothes are fine too even if you’ll wear them longer than a child. There are many people who give away clothes in perfect state just because they don’t wear them as much. I’ve had similar luck with brand new 40€ jeans and second hand 5€ jeans.
Yeah, suddenly coding on a phone doesn’t seem so bad