I've just tried this (Tor version 0.4.8.12) and it seems to be working fine for me. I've tested with both 8.8.8.8 and 1.1.1.1.
...We did not want to contact FlyCASS first as it appeared to be operated only by one person and we did not want to alarm them. On April 23rd, we were able to disclose the issue to the Department of Homeland Security, who acknowledged the issue and confirmed that they “are taking this very seriously”.
I think the owner of FlyCASS was sufficiently alarmed!
A list comprehension is used to convert and/or filter elements of another iterable, in your case a range but this could also be another list. So you can think of it as taking one list, filtering/converting each element and producing a new list as a result.
So there's no need to append to any list as that's implicit in the comprehension.
For example, to produce a list of all squares in a range you could do:
[x*x for x in range(10)]
This would automatically "append" each square to the resulting list, there's no need to do that yourself.
Common Lisp. I really enjoy the interactive development experience and the language itself (and macros). I feel though that the ecosystem isn't very active and so existing libraries are often unmaintained which is a shame.
Please tell me more about How many of you are actually chatbots?
"...You know, as a writer, if you took away my paper, I would write on my heart. If you take away my ink, I'd write on the wind. (Pauses) It wouldn't be an ideal way to work." - Garth Marenghi
mbsync to sync IMAP to my local machine, then mu4e in Emacs to manage everything
Emacs + Elfeed
Sorry, not sure how that happened! Yes, here it is: https://blog.polaris64.net/post/verlet-physics-playground/