Point taken. Thank you for the reminder. I was probably being harsh. Appreciate the feedback.
sunbeam60
Man, I luckily upgraded to 64GB (when MSFS 2024 said “that’s preferred”) before all this.
In a personal context, agreed. In a business context, I completely disagree. Analysts, finance, operations etc all have much more complex requirements.
Google Sheets is competing with Excel. Proton Sheets is competing with Google Sheets. So Proton Sheets is competing with Excel.
I used Word as a comparative example to say that parts of the office/docs suite are easy to compete with (there’s only so may things a word processor can do), while others (like Google Sheets or Excel, whichever order you prefer) is incredibly difficult to compete with; a formatting error on import of a Word doc is acceptable. An unsupported formula ruins the entire thing.
Agreed. The EU ain’t perfect, but I’d take it over any alternative.
Does if have FILTER, array formulas, spill zones, MAP, data tables, query engines, SQL engine etc etc?
To compete with Word: Easy. To compete with Excel: Very, very difficult (pretty much only Google Sheets have managed).
Fortunately I live in a country where the government can (broadly) be trusted.
I thin Zig actually stands out pretty well from the pack. You sound maybe a little jealous or something?
The build system was basically a black box until 0.14.
The Zig core team is pretty chill and pretty united around strong engineering ethos. And tbf their own compiler is pretty performant and produces similar level quality code. The argument that compiler dev is hard falls fairly flat when they are succeeding in developing their own compiler.
You made the dreadful mistake of saying something positive about LLMs. We shall now proceed to downvote you accordingly.