je_skirata
This speaks to me on a spiritual level
Nonsense, LOTR has been sold as a single volume for a long time now. I have the 50th anniversary edition, which is a single physical book.
Just want to say I agree here. Kreia pretty much always saying I'm making the wrong choices annoys the fun out of me.
Probably The Lord of the Rings. I read the entire thing almost ten years ago, and only remember bits and pieces. It's so long that I could definitely read it multiple times and still learn new information every time I read it.
"I figured out way back if God is all-powerful, He cannot be all good. And if He is all good, then He cannot be all-powerful." - Lex Luthor, Batman V Superman
As long as you have at least one straight white male character that isn't treated like a joke by other characters you should be fine 👍
- The joy of "figuring it out" and customizing everything you want to the minutest details
Customization is my reason. I've got a two-monitor setup in KDE with different panels on each one. Each one is highly customized specifically to me, and the customizations can't be done in Windows.
It's easy if you can follow directions, hard if you don't have directions, impossible if you don't have directions and don't know what you're doing; archinstall is effortless.
It's hard to give advice about how code should be structured, since there's many ways of accomplishing the same things, but you're doing the right thing by thinking about scalability before you get too deep to change it.
You could try separating eacg trigger condition into their own functions, so that if an OnAttack gets triggered it will only check and loop through OnAttack abilities.
Something like:
OnAttack.connect( CheckOnAttack )
OnDamaged.connect( CheckOnDamaged )
func CheckOnAttack( ATTACK_TYPE ):
match ATTACK_TYPE:
....
func CheckOnDamaged( DAMAGE_TYPE ):
match DAMAGE_TYPE:
....
The open source kernel drivers will work. If you want to bother installing their proprietary drivers, I'd recommend reading the Arch Wiki, but you may need to do some things differently even though EndeavorOS is Arch-based.
From the wiki: "Most users do not need these proprietary drivers."
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/AMDGPU_PRO