How to use:
./wordle.sh
Or try the unlimit mode:
#!/usr/bin/env python3 | |
############################################################################## | |
# Installation: | |
# First, run the following command to install the required dependencies: | |
# pip3 install rumps | |
# Then, copy the script to /usr/bin/local/tmr | |
############################################################################## | |
import rumps |
call plug#begin('~/.config/nvim/plugged') | |
Plug 'scrooloose/nerdtree', { 'on': 'NERDTreeToggle' } | |
Plug 'Xuyuanp/nerdtree-git-plugin' | |
Plug 'tpope/vim-commentary' | |
Plug 'tpope/vim-fugitive' | |
Plug 'dracula/vim' | |
Plug 'vim-airline/vim-airline' | |
Plug 'vim-airline/vim-airline-themes' | |
Plug 'bronson/vim-trailing-whitespace' | |
Plug 'rakr/vim-one' |
UPDATE 2021: I wrote this long before I wrote my book Functional Programming Made Easier: A Step-by-step Guide. For a much more in depth discussion on Monads see Chapter 18.
Initially, Monads are the biggest, scariest thing about Functional Programming and especially Haskell. I've used monads for quite some time now, but I didn't have a very good model for what they really are. I read Philip Wadler's paper Monads for functional programming and I still didnt quite see the pattern.
It wasn't until I read the blog post You Could Have Invented Monads! (And Maybe You Already Have.) that I started to see things more clearly.
This is a distillation of those works and most likely an oversimplification in an attempt to make things easier to understand. Nuance can come later. What we need when first le
Should be work with 0.18
Destructuring(or pattern matching) is a way used to extract data from a data structure(tuple, list, record) that mirros the construction. Compare to other languages, Elm support much less destructuring but let's see what it got !
myTuple = ("A", "B", "C")
myNestedTuple = ("A", "B", "C", ("X", "Y", "Z"))