Okay, but even if we assumed (x=b) to be a very small equivalence relation, it should appear in the denominator position to form an equivalence quotient.
That was so eye-opening for me when I figured out you can just grep a block device for files unlinked by the file system but not yet physically overwritten. Magically reanimating lost files can be such an incredibly simple operation.
I'm keeping a large distance to hyprland, I have not heard about Omarchy or dhh before, but it does seem very sus from these descriptions. It is disappointing to see Framework sponsor such projects, but we have to take a step back and realize that this is not as important as the 800+ forum replies make it out to be. These really are small details. We need to more often unite around smaller sets of shared values and not hold everything to the absolute highest standards, although having such standards is important in itself.
Huh? This is a book. You can just go to a bookstore, buy the book and read it. You don't need to follow any social media on order to read a book. Yes, the book has it's own Instagram account, like so many things do, but you are free to simply ignore that.
Okay, but even if we assumed (x=b) to be a very small equivalence relation, it should appear in the denominator position to form an equivalence quotient.