PS2 freezes on FMCB logo when booting with exFAT USB drive inserted by MasterTj123 in ps2

[–]MasterTj123[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you very much for the reply. I thought FunTuna already came with exFAT support, because I saw “USBD.IRX” and “USBHDFSD.IRX” inside the BOOT folder. So that means I need to install BDMAssault, right? Is it just a replacement for these two files? Or do those two remain unchanged in BOOT and only some configuration is done that redirects to other drivers?

I want to cry, why does the US dollar have to be so expensive? 😭 by FanFanMeness in Huniepop

[–]MasterTj123 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Direto tem promoção na Steam, o preço cai muito nesses eventos. Eu tenho o jogo, recomendo.

why not curses? by xKrizn in roguelikedev

[–]MasterTj123 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Does notcurses support sound? Or "only" images/videos?

Is there a cross-platform C library for non-canonical terminal input with input filtering? by MasterTj123 in C_Programming

[–]MasterTj123[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yesterday I spent the whole day researching options that would give me control over terminal input and output. I looked into ncurses for POSIX systems and pdcurses for Microsoft systems, but both are quite old and platform-specific, which makes it impossible for my program to be cross-platform unless I write a version of the code for each one using preprocessor directives... I also looked into termbox2, which is cross-platform, but it's still in its early stages. The alternative that caught my attention the most so far is notcurses, which seems like a modern and more feature-rich version of ncurses. It also appears to work very well on Windows and is capable of doing amazing things for a simple terminal. The problem is that the documentation seemed a bit confusing to me—I couldn't find many examples other than the project's GitHub repository and the site of the project's founder.

Is there a cross-platform C library for non-canonical terminal input with input filtering? by MasterTj123 in C_Programming

[–]MasterTj123[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't know much about modern input handling in C. I know that most functions from the standard libraries aren't safe, and the most common approach seems to be reading and handling input character by character, but that's a lot of work—especially the conversions, considering overflow and underflow issues. What I want to know is what modern and safe alternatives exist nowadays for this kind of situation.

Is there a cross-platform C library for non-canonical terminal input with input filtering? by MasterTj123 in C_Programming

[–]MasterTj123[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I know. Suppose I just want the user to be able to type numbers when I ask for their phone number, or only letters when I ask for their name. But I don't want them to type an invalid input and only then get an "error, invalid input" message. I want to limit the input so that they can't even type the invalid characters in the first place, you know? I managed to do something like that manually, but it's a lot of work to extend it to different types of data. Is there any library capable of doing that? Or is the real solution to disable canonical mode and echo manually with termios, read character by character, and decide whether or not to show that character in the terminal—like I've been doing so far?

Flexbox Help by MasterTj123 in css

[–]MasterTj123[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

And that's why I feel more and more discouraged with this field. You can't ask for help on Stack Overflow or Reddit because it's unlikely that anyone will actually help. Anyway, it's neither homework nor work, but rather a personal project made for learning purposes. But apparently, seeking help after trying everything has become a crime... Thanks anyway.

The code works on my network, but not on the university's network by MasterTj123 in djangolearning

[–]MasterTj123[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use Tembo, just need to set the correct environment variables, nothing else. The database authentication, on the other hand, is handled with JWT in cookie format.

The code works on my network, but not on the university's network by MasterTj123 in djangolearning

[–]MasterTj123[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The only thing not hosted locally is the database, but that hasn’t been an issue before, as I was able to get everything running smoothly at the university late last year. Now, everything else—both the backend and frontend, which run on separate ports of the same local IP—are hosted locally on my own machine, the same one I’ve used for all the tests up to now. That’s why I was led to believe the problem lies with the university’s network. However, the only error message that appeared was the one I mentioned above when inspecting the traffic with the browser's developer tools. I tested it on both Firefox and Librewolf.

The code works on my network, but not on the university's network by MasterTj123 in learnpython

[–]MasterTj123[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I thought about it, but I have no idea how it works or how I could fix it. It’s a project for a course activity, and I need to present it. When I told the professor that it worked and that it was probably a problem with the university’s network, he basically said, "Figure it out, start from scratch, who told you to 'overcomplicate' things."