OSMAnd works really well. For YTMusic, you can instead pick LibreTube and use it in music player mode.
velox_vulnus
They're also salty incels, I'm not even kidding. They have other sibling organisation like the Rama Sene or Bajrang Dal. Guess what they do during Valentine's week? Moral policing.
That's not even the symbol for Hindutva. Yankee libs will make no effort for PoCs to reclaim their symbol stolen by fascist groups in Europe, neither will they taint words from their own language, but rather soil and demonize other's culture to hold an imaginary symbol of evil, considered normal in the other part of the world as something they're fighting against.
Neoliberal cope is realising that people from Asia still use swastika/wan zi/manji, whether they like it or not.
Jain Emblem
Hindu Swastika
Native American Whirling Logs
The symbol for Hindutva or Hindu fascism is the one used by RSS, the paramilitary organisation responsible for atrocities on minorities, which in turn was a symbol stolen from the average Hindus. That's where the word "bhagwa/saffron terrorism" comes from.
This you?
Thanke Zchön, thiß waß inßightvul.
So they should be in an interracial relationship. Got it 👍 .
Don't take the above comment seriously, I was being sarcastic.
What about data structures like gap buffer or piece table? Would they be ideal for something like, say, a TUI-interface application?
If you see rule #3 of this community, it mentions that support question should be posted at /c/lemmy_[email protected].
Search depends on what you would like to find: from the web ui, you have to select the type (comments, users, posts), then choose the scope (all, local, subscribed), then choose the sort type (top all time, controversial, new, old, etc).
The rest of the forms (like community, creator) are self-explanatory - community drop-down won't work if you're searching for a community, likewise creator drop-down won't work if you're searching for a user.
To ping and mention a user, @@. (e.g.- @[email protected] ) should work. To just mention them, /u/@. (e.g.- /u/[email protected]) should do. To point a specific community, /c/ (e.g.- /c/ask_[email protected]) should work.
But wouldn't this be potentially unsafe? What programming language has this type of implementation, by the way?
I keep falling for this every fucking time.