fixing a bunch of broken stuff I think

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Chris Cochrun 2022-02-25 14:16:41 -06:00
parent 0dbc3ead0e
commit 8bace887a2
1551 changed files with 299 additions and 57481 deletions

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&#32; submitted by &#32; <a href="https://www.reddit.com/user/emgee_1"> /u/emgee_1 </a> <br/> <span><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/emacs/comments/r5it3i/is_there_an_easy_way_to_follow_the_world/">[link]</a></span> &#32; <span><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/emacs/comments/r5it3i/is_there_an_easy_way_to_follow_the_world/">[comments]</a></span>

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<table> <tr><td> <a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/unixporn/comments/q84kcz/awesome_poipul/"> <img src="https://external-preview.redd.it/DuPyo0GzI_WdAjYcjWTxkvyB4cyLot1PCG2Wwori5kg.png?width=640&amp;crop=smart&amp;auto=webp&amp;s=6b70c40462d37f4243e3e4b89be930c60bcc4091" alt="[Awesome] Poipul" title="[Awesome] Poipul" /> </a> </td><td> &#32; submitted by &#32; <a href="https://www.reddit.com/user/AutisticLoner"> /u/AutisticLoner </a> <br/> <span><a href="https://i.imgur.com/6gZ9kiu.png">[link]</a></span> &#32; <span><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/unixporn/comments/q84kcz/awesome_poipul/">[comments]</a></span> </td></tr></table>

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<!-- SC_OFF --><div class="md"><p>I was playing games fine earlier, and I closed steam to get some work done. </p> <p>I try opening it later and am faced with <a href="https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=264833">this</a> issue. I couldn&#39;t get it to launch, so I reboot.</p> <p>Now when I try and launch, I see <a href="https://i.imgur.com/wSZf08W.png">this</a>. I haven&#39;t even updated since I last played stuff, so I&#39;m not sure what the issue is (Steam did just update because of course it updates independantly)</p> <p>It does seem to open after a long wait, so I guess I&#39;ll keep an eye on it.,</p> </div><!-- SC_ON --> &#32; submitted by &#32; <a href="https://www.reddit.com/user/Ken_Mcnutt"> /u/Ken_Mcnutt </a> <br/> <span><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/archlinux/comments/qyl2me/steam_broken_all_of_a_sudden/">[link]</a></span> &#32; <span><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/archlinux/comments/qyl2me/steam_broken_all_of_a_sudden/">[comments]</a></span>

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<!-- SC_OFF --><div class="md"><p>I have node project (type: module in package.json) and I use typescript lang server.</p> <p>want to make this work: <code>import { scaleBand } from &quot;d3-scale&quot;;</code> but can&#39;t figure out how. require-ing it works fine.</p> <p>autocomplete and lsp-find-definition don&#39;t work, with the latter giving this error</p> <pre><code>helm-M-x-execute-command: Wrong type argument: (or eieio-object class), #s(xref-item #(&quot;export function scaleBand&lt;Domain extends { toString(): string } = string&gt;(&quot; 16 25 (face highlight)) #s(xref-file-location &quot;/Users/xxx/Library/Caches/typescript/4.2/node_modules/@types/d3-scale/index.d.ts&quot; 2517 16)), obj </code></pre> <p>edit: </p> <p>eldoc works, no the symbol&#39;s type is known to lsp. autocomplete is actually OK.</p> <p>however it&#39;s not about import vs. require. The destructuring seems to cause the problem. Doing like bellow causes no errors, but still does not navigate to the definition inside the d3-scale module.</p> <pre><code>import d3_scale from &quot;d3-scale&quot;; const { scaleBand } = d3_scale; </code></pre> <p>&#x200B;</p> </div><!-- SC_ON --> &#32; submitted by &#32; <a href="https://www.reddit.com/user/gdanov"> /u/gdanov </a> <br/> <span><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/emacs/comments/q87eg8/lspmode_javascript_node_es2020_import_problem/">[link]</a></span> &#32; <span><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/emacs/comments/q87eg8/lspmode_javascript_node_es2020_import_problem/">[comments]</a></span>

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<img src="https://www-images.christianitytoday.com/images/125867.jpg?w=540" width="540" /><p class="text">By Jeffry Blair, a Northern Seminary DMin graduate and pastor. He was asked by a group of leaders to advise them on how to finish seminary while in ministry and Jeff puts together a wise presentation for all of us.</p>
<p class="text">I want to encourage you to complete your education. I hope to show you why you should and how you can. Here are six strategies for finishing your studies while you are up to your armpits in ministry.</p>
<p class="text"><em>One - Feel the Weight </em></p>
<p class="text">I was twenty-three years old in the fall of 1999 when I first stepped foot on the campus of Southwestern Seminary in Fort Worth. Each student received a copy of &ldquo;The Religious Life of the Theological Student&rdquo; by the Princeton theologian, B. B. Warfield, who said,</p>
<p class="text">The ministry is a learned profession; and the man without learning, no matter with what other gifts he may be endowed, is unfit for its duties. But learning, though indispensable, is not the most indispensable thing for a minister. &lsquo;Apt to teach&rsquo;&mdash;yes, the minister must be.... Not apt merely to exhort, to beseech, to appeal, to entreat, not even merely to testify&hellip; but to teach. <em>And teaching implies knowledge:</em><em>he who teaches must know&hellip;</em> But aptness to teach alone does not make a minister; nor is it his primary qualification&hellip; <em>A minister must be learned, on pain of being utterly incompetent for his work.</em> But before and above being learned, a minister must be godly.<a href="#_ftn1" target="_blank" class="">[1]</a></p>
<p class="text">Warfield was right, and this is the big idea of his speech: godliness is the indispensable attribute of the pastor. As Robert Murray M&rsquo;Cheyne said, &ldquo;A holy minister is an awful weapon in the hand of God.&rdquo; Warfield was also at great pains, however, to contend that Christian pastors must be capable teachers (1 Timothy ...</p><p class="more"><a href="https://www.christianitytoday.com/scot-mcknight/2021/october/six-reasons-to-finish-your-education.html">Continue reading</a>...</p>
<p><br /><a href="https://rss.beaconads.com/click.php?z=1289806&k=c779018782158d93282944b4f7dd4d03&a=190092&c=65511328" target="_blank"><img src="https://rss.beaconads.com/img.php?z=1289806&k=c779018782158d93282944b4f7dd4d03&a=190092&c=65511328" border="0" alt="" /></a></p>
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<p class="text">Not too long ago, a pharmacist in Nashville was arrested for diluting cancer drugs while still charging full price for the prescription. Local doctors would phone in their patient&#39;s prescriptions and this pharmacy would mix the required drugs. Patients would drop by the pharmacy, pick up their drugs and take them as prescribed. If the cancer had been caught in time, the medicine, mixed with a lot of prayer, would do its work. The pharmacist had developed a very successful practice. Both doctors and patients had learned to trust him.</p>
<p class="text">Sometime in the past few years, the pharmacist had gotten into money trouble. So, he started diluting the medicine. That is, he wouldn&#39;t put as much of the chemicals into the solution that attacked the cancer cells and still charged the full price for the prescription. His scheme was working pretty well until the doctors noticed a consistent downturn in their outcomes. People with similar illnesses were no longer responding to the medicine. A routine investigation discovered the problem. The medicine wasn&rsquo;t strong enough to do the work.</p>
<p class="text">Some days, I wonder if we&#39;ve done the same thing with the gospel. For years, experts, whoever they were, told us as preachers that we should with go easy on the guilt and condemnation in our sermons. On one hand, I can see their point. I grew up in a church where we were held over hell like marshmallows. We were afraid all the time, never knowing when one sin would be the final straw, forcing God to give up and throw us into hell.</p>
<p class="text">So, we did. We laid off the guilt and preached grace upon grace. That didn&#39;t work either.</p>
<p class="text">For one reason, it&#39;s not honest. Unless you&#39;re dealing with a psychopath, people know when they&#39;re doing wrong. Most ...</p><p class="more"><a href="https://www.christianitytoday.com/scot-mcknight/2021/october/diluting-medicine.html">Continue reading</a>...</p>
<p><br /><a href="https://rss.beaconads.com/click.php?z=1289806&k=c779018782158d93282944b4f7dd4d03&a=190083&c=56392699" target="_blank"><img src="https://rss.beaconads.com/img.php?z=1289806&k=c779018782158d93282944b4f7dd4d03&a=190083&c=56392699" border="0" alt="" /></a></p>
4<img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/christianitytoday/jesuscreed/~4/c3BGV_y2jpc" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>