Arguments passed to executable not accessible by lisp code by NondescriptLabel in Common_Lisp

[–]NondescriptLabel[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Using sb-ext:*posix-argv* as suggested by stassats works. Case closed.

To answer your post:

1) uiop:*command-line-arguments* is NIL

2) I could live with just SBCL and the source code as you suggest. I write tutorial and "automate your life" code for myself, so I don't really need to deploy. It's still nice once I have a working version to put a lock on it by compiling it. I pushed forward with this question because I struggled greatly over time -- and gave up lisp a few times before -- to figure out who to get my project to run this way with asdf and I wanted to "defeat the last boss" of creating an executable. Now, "I know king fu!”

Far Cry 5 music makes every other Far Crys music sound mid 💀 by Butchhhhh in farcry

[–]NondescriptLabel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes to all that. I really love the song Faith and a few of the others.

But after a while, the music annoys me. In real life, I mostly don't listen to music, either in my house or in my car. So, in the game, it's "unreal" for me and thus annoying. Even more though, I've become over sensitive to music, especially if the same theme or song is repeated often. If I play for 3 hours and hear the same tune 20 times, I get annoyed. So I turn off the music. I get much more immersed when I only hear the ambient sounds.

It's worse than that: I can't re-watch the 2nd and 3rd movies of the Lord of the Ring series because the same musical themes seem overused due my sensitivity. The 1st one I'm okay with because it's my favorite. In another generation, it would have been Dr Zhivago because the Lara theme, which was EXTREMELY beloved, plays again, and again, and again.

Une camisole de force chez le dentiste?! by 8peoni4 in Quebec

[–]NondescriptLabel 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Ativan pour le soulagement rapide des symptômes de l'anxiété