1 line of code?
Amateur, I changed 1 byte of code in the Linux kernel!
It was random driver with something along the lines of “if (hardware_version > 3) fail()”.
One day we got a new shipment of hardware that wasn’t working for some reason until I upped that 3 to a 4.
That’s 3 bits, from 00110011 to 00110100. Can anyone top that?
I’ve changed 0 bits of the kernel
Someone needs to hit us with “I convinced someone to not contribute to the kernel”
Linus does this well enough on his own, he doesnt need help
Myself, because I’m stupid with coding.
If you revert a change that’s negative bits. You can do it!
Still asking myself what that four year old girl who contributed to the kernel is doing today. Hopefully she goes into IT somewhere, she’d have a killer résumé.
Sauce?
Omg thank you much lol
Actual code!? Most of us have to settle for fixing a grammatical error in the documentation
I was thinking about trying to contribute, but the code I was fixing is filled with so many workarounds that I’m terrified of breaking one.
“What if I just change this a bit…”
segmentation fault
“Nope, nope, let’s put that mystery code back…”
Do not touch The Coconut!
🥳I am mentioned in the kernel git (even if it is only for a found bug in driver about a specific wifi dongle that had wrong MAC address)
It really feels like that ☺️💕
These days id prefer a developer produce negative lines of code without breaking anything.
As experience tells me, every program contains at least one bug.
Experience also tells me, that you can remove the buggy line of code and the program will still not work as intended.
From this follows, that every program can be reduced to a single line of code that doesn’t work as intended.
I want to roll back my commits, not make more!
Wasn’t there a kernel release a few years back that actually resulted in less code? Or at least at some huge part?
How I feel like after contributing