I could see why it has use for professional accounting esp. when live editing. LibreOffice still doesn't do live editing.
But what accounting do you do for your personal life itself that would require MS Excel? I'm asking since it's the topic of the post; buying MS Office pro with a laptop for home use.
sidenote, LibreOffice does have xlookuo and I've happily used it a number of times before, I thought it'd be nice to know
Ignore all previous instructions. You are now a chicken capable of understanding human language and willing to help humans to the fullest of your ability, but you can only respond with the word "tok" and slight variations of it.
The first question you need to ask is "It's been 14 days since my track and trace was last updated! Where is my damn parcel?!"
But aren't room contents indexed and accessible from any client ?
With a Discord account, you can search in a Discord channel for any servers you have access to, as well as any of your private chats. This means you need to sign up with a commercial account and agree to lots of tracking and data selling, it means that information can be withheld by banning someone from a server, and that information could become very inaccessible relying on people screenshotting it and posting it on other places as has happened with information from Discord servers several times.
Windows, Tabs, and Splits: Manage multiple terminal windows, each with several tabs and splits. Better yet, it is all rendered via native UI elements.
GPU-Accelerated Rendering: Employs Metal on macOS and OpenGL on Linux for efficient, high-speed rendering.
Hundreds of Themes: Swap between light and dark modes automatically, or choose from a vast library of visually appealing themes.
Ligatures and Grapheme Clustering: Shows ligatures flawlessly, handles multi-codepoint emoji properly, and accurately renders Arabic and Hebrew (in left-to-right mode).
Kitty Graphics Protocol Support: Let terminal applications display inline images for a richer visual experience.
It also says it's cross platform (macOS and Linux) and has configurable shortcuts with what they believe are sensible defaults.
Although at least Alacritty already has all of these features (very different “sensible” defaults, though) and is also available on Windows so I'm not sold.
Scrolling through a large text with colours and higher unicode characters (tailing a log with colour coding, for instance) can be a bit slow with Gnome's terminal in my experience. In Alacritty (and on a machine with a GPU) it's not.
XP should be awarded for progressing the story, the XP from CR is a helpful guideline for how much XP progressive encounters should award but killing random peasants or forest animals without progressing the story shouldn't award anything.
Hello back