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Joined 7 months ago
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Cake day: June 1st, 2024

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  • Hey cool, thanks for the recommendation, I added CT4MGM and a couple other fonts to my collection. I have already found fonts that do deranged stuff, like defining offsets outside the buffer they’re supposed to be in.

    Right now I’m not creating the sounds myself, but rather using a library for the purpose. I’m intending to replace it with my own implementation (or a suitable alternative, if one exists) later, if I just have the time. The biggest remaining blocker for release is doing exactly that for the midi sequencer, because the current one doesn’t let me do seeking.

    I have other related projects planned as well, like a soundfont compiler that builds a font from “source code” that consists of loose samples and text files that define the instruments. I promised myself to not start anything until this one is out, though.





  • sevon@lemmy.kde.socialtoLemmy@lemmy.mlIs there is a bug from my end?
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    2 months ago

    The number shown is how many posts or comments your instance is aware of. If your number is smaller than the real one, it means that there’s content that doesn’t exist on your instance.

    The missing content is either:

    • Old: The account is like 3 or 4 years older tham your instance. Old content doesn’t get federated unless someone deliberately asks for it.
    • Posted in communities that no one at your instance has subscribed to them yet. This stuff also doesn’t get auto-federated.

  • I was vaguely aware that some ancient architectures had weird byte widths, but I did not know about this. Pretty interesting.

    This paper cannot succeed without mentioning the PDP-10 (though noting that PDP-11 has 8-bit bytes), and the fact that some DSPs have 24-bit or 32-bit words treated as “bytes.” These architectures made sense in their era, where word sizes varied and the notion of a byte wasn’t standardized. Today, nearly every general-purpose and embedded system adheres to the 8-bit byte model. The question isn’t whether there are still architectures where bytes aren’t 8-bits (there are!) but whether these care about modern C++… and whether modern C++ cares about them.


  • The file is named Cargo.toml. Whatever dependencies you add to there are automatically downloaded by Cargo. You can manage them with cargo add and cargo remove.

    cargo install is not the same thing. That installs binaries. I last installed cargo-release to automate the annoying part of managing git tags and crate version number.