This makes code readable in Hack Studio.
This commit also replaces the 'highlight' window colour
with one that matches theme (the previous was the default).
I finished off the Miscellaneous Technical section,
that is U+2300 - U+23FF, itemized below. Now we have
a bunch of APL glyphs :^)
2205
2300 - 2313
2319
231C - 2325
2329 - 232A
232C - 237F
238D - 2395
239B - 23CC
23D0 - 23E8
23AE
23FF
2B21
Add flags for Palestine, Leinster, Munster, Ulster,
South Ostrobothnia, South Savonia, Kainuu, Kanta-Häme,
Central Ostrobothnia, Central Finland, North Karelia,
Northern Savonia, Päijänne Tavastia, Satakunta, Uusimaa
This directory has to be writable if we want to install ports that have
been built inside Serenity. It's owned by root anyway, so having it be
read-only does not provide many security benefits.
This opens many opportunities to add more data printed in lspci in a
flexible manner - so instead of reading an ever-expanding JSON encoded
file, we can add more features and let the utility read the directory
entries from sysfs.
This also allows not only filtering data on devices but to easily filter
non-wanted devices when printing the output.
Note that only the first test actually functions currently.
Single-number ratios instead get parsed as a `<number>`, and will do
until the parser gets smarter. (The alternative, where all
single-numbers get parsed as `<ratio>`, does make the tests succeed,
but numbers are more common than ratios so I have given numbers
preference for now.)
Also simplified the styling and text a bit. Now, red = fail, green =
success. No more "unstyled = fail" stuff.
Currently, disabled text colors are hardcoded. They look good in Default
and light themes, but no so good in dark ones. This PR adds new
variables for all themes to correctly display disabled text.
Ensure we test both setTimeout and setInterval (and their cancellation
methods), and test scenarios such as raising exceptions in the callback,
passing extra arguments, etc.
This change allow the user to request the kernel to not use any PCI
resources/devices at all.
Also, don't try to initialize devices that rely on PCI if disabled.
I didn't notice that CLion had auto-generated this, oops! As wonderful
as my web design skills are, I don't actually want to enshrine my name
at the top of this file for posterity.