🚨 ¡ÚLTIMA HORA VENEZUELA! 🚨🇻🇪
URGENTE — ¡LO ÚLTIMO! 🇻🇪 🇺🇸
Senador Rick Scott:
"Delcy Rodríguez debe ser advertida de que esperamos que garantice la seguridad de todos los estadounidenses en Venezuela y que los proteja de cualquier daño. El mundo está observando."
@elonmusk - "To those who say that the United States is only interested in oil, I ask those people: What do you think the Russians and the Chinese wanted? The recipe for arepas?"
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA, he nailed it.
🚀Only 1 week to go before we present Silent Planet at the Tokyo Game Show 2025! 🎮@tokyo_game_show
📍Location: Makuhari Messe, Hall 7, Booth 07-N14
We’re more than thrilled to announce that we’ve nearly hit 20K Wishlists!
Help us reach more milestones so we can deliver a great experience to all of you!
👉Please re-share this post and add us to your Wishlist on Steam! 🌌
https://t.co/sAp3QsvzEr
#SilentPlanet #VertexZeroGames #RedDuneGames #TGS2025 #東京ゲームショウ
Twitter I need your help! After a break from my dream monster taming game I decided to pivot from a mobile platform release and instead focus on a PC release.
I already ported all the controls over to mouse and keyboard.
How do you like the resolution and aspect ratio so far?
In C, the register keyword is a storage class specifier that suggests to the compiler that a variable should be stored in a CPU register instead of memory for faster access.
It’s a hint, not a guarantee, as the compiler may ignore it based on optimization decisions or register availability.
Restrictions:
- You cannot take the address of a register variable (e.g., using the & operator), as it may not reside in memory.
- It’s typically used for variables like loop counters or frequently accessed local variables.
- The compiler decides whether to honor the request, depending on register availability and optimization settings.
Modern Usage:
- In modern compilers (e.g., GCC, Clang), the register keyword is often ignored because compilers are highly optimized and can better decide which variables to place in registers. Explicit use is rare in contemporary C programming.
(The C code in the screenshot was converted to RISC-V assembly.)