And in case you can’t find the sidebar, the relevant part is:
- Image uploads are enabled 4 weeks after account creation
- Image upload limit is 500kb per image
And in case you can’t find the sidebar, the relevant part is:
- Image uploads are enabled 4 weeks after account creation
- Image upload limit is 500kb per image
A cup can refer to a variety of different measurements (see Cup (unit) - Wikipedia). The cup OP referenced is a metric cup, a US customary cup is 8 US fluid ounces. Measuring cups can come labelled using cups as a unit, usually including a whole cup, and that is presumably what OP was referring to.
Well, the good news is that according to this list, your instance already blocks Threads.
10 minutes based on my experience.
To give a theological answer, no. A lich is usually understood as a sorcerer who has achieved an undead state or immortality, usually by binding their soul to the corporeal world in a phylactery. That does not apply in Jesus’ case, since he did not pursue any sort of magic to avoid death, much less binding his soul to a phylactery. The resurrection of Jesus was a supernatural act of God, restoring Jesus to true life.
As to the second part of your question, I was not aware that holy water harming liches was a common trope in fiction (it is usually seen in reference to vampires), but even if it is applied to undead more widely, we have established that Jesus was restored to true life, not to any form of unnatural undeath. Moreover, holiness comes from God (that which is holy is set apart for God), and Jesus is fully God, so contact with holy things would not harm him. Indeed, Christ is now in the true holy place in heaven (Hebrews 9:24), which we can only enter when cleansed by his blood (Hebrews 10:19-22).
I’m glad my points we’re helpful!
There is some documentation on examples in the Cargo book. The basic procedure is to put it in an examples
directory alongside the src
directory (and in its own subfolder if it has multiple files), and you can add an entry for it in the Cargo.toml
(although it should automatically detect it if you put it in the examples
directory, so that is only strictly necessary if you want to change the default settings).
A few things I noticed:
http::request::parse()
, do you actually need a BufReader
? It would be better to make it generic over something implementing BufRead
, that allows what you have but also makes tests and examples easier since you wouldn’t have to open a TCP connection just to do something that is essentially string parsing.http::response::Response::to_string()
, that match on lines 78-85 makes me uneasy, because you are silently changing the status code if it isn’t one you recognise. It would be better to signal an error. It would be even better to just check when the status code is set (perhaps with a status code enum to list the ones you support, since what you have isn’t all the defined codes) so that you can’t fail when converting to a string.to_string()
method at all, or whether you can just implement Display
(which gives you to_string()
for free via the ToString
trait).String
as an error type pretty much everywhere. The better approach is to create an enum representing all the possible errors, so that a user of your library can match against them. Make the enum implement Error
and Display
and it will fit fine into the rest of the error handling infrastructure. There are crates like thiserror
that can reduce the boilerplate around this.io.rs
that doesn’t appear to be connected to anything.main.rs
, which seems off in something that sounds like it should be purely a library crate. You probably want that to be an example or an integration test instead.That’s all I could see with a quick look. In terms of general advice: remember to look at warnings, run cargo clippy
, and look at the API guidelines.
25 isn’t too young, and makes sense if you have focused on education and career. I followed a similar path in that I spent a lot of time in education, only starting to properly consider courting someone around the age of 25 or 26 after I finished my PhD. Things were complicated somewhat by Covid, but I got married last year at the age of 30.
As to losing weight, I can’t speak much from experience on that, but losing some weight may be a good idea, as much for your own health as anything else. Unless you are really overweight (in which case it is a medical issue that you should address), I think you shouldn’t worry too much about it in terms of dating.
The understanding I’ve generally heard, and which seems supported by the context, is that the fig tree symbolises the unfruitfulness of God’s people. This is particularly apparent in that both Matthew and Mark record it as happening alongside Jesus casting out people trading in the temple (Luke records the cleansing of the temple but not the fig tree thing). It is then followed by Jesus telling a series of parables against the religious leaders. There may also be a relation to the parable of the barren fig tree earlier on in Luke 13.
I can understand why people wouldn’t specifically talk about the fediverse on other sites. It just seems like there is a lot of coverage of X and Meta in the news, but there doesn’t seem to have been even a passing mention of fediverse sites in most of what I’ve seen. I guess the more established social media sites are still a lot more significant than fediverse alternatives though.
What’s sad is that people aren’t talking about Mastodon nearly as much as they are talking about Threads and X. It just doesn’t seem to get much publicity outside of the fediverse.
Image uploads are currently disabled on lemm.ee: https://lemm.ee/post/5839513. Images were restricted in size before that as well to avoid using too much server space. The idea is to use image hosting sites instead.
To add to that, there were even cases where a push for religious reform led directly to political reform, like the English Civil War.
And in the evening service, a version of the Nun section of Psalm 119 to the tune of “Amazing Grace”, and “The God of Abraham praise”
We did “Church of God, elect and glorious”, a version of Psalm 29 to the tune of “Immortal, invisible”, “How firm a foundation” and “Your glorious cause, O God” this morning.
Definite atonement is certainly the better term for it
The admin made a post reporting on the finances.
Technically a general eye doctor would be an opthalmologist. An optician is someone who makes lenses. The person you see for an eye test at the opticians is an optometrist (someone who measures what strength lenses you need).
For me it took a while to come to terms with Reformed Soteriology. Understanding God’s sovereignty is particularly tricky at the best of times and it didn’t particularly help that most discussions of it I came across were presenting it as a short 5 points description (where one of the points is “limited atonement”, which sounds a bit discouraging). A fuller understanding of it woven into the rest of Reformed theology helped, and I found the description given in the Canons of Dort quite well thought out.
That code point is U+0D9E SINHALA LETTER KANTAJA NAASIKYAYA. It’s a letter in a writing system used in Sri Lanka.