I've seen ^L used in elisp source to break up code into screenfuls, but today I saw something similar in Python: https://bitbucket.org/pypa/setuptools/src/b4d6fd725784559a21e206e15fe097c051697464/setuptools/package_index.py?at=0.7-maintenance#cl-986
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I've seen "cons cells" and "cons pairs", but today I saw "conses", which is new to me.
(Clearly Lisp has no downsides, only pros and cons! 🙃)
On the challenge of writing accurate source spans on Unicode source code: https://reedmullanix.com/posts/unicode-source-spans.html
Also (see footnotes) a fair number of LSP clients assume UTF-8 despite early versions of LSP mandating UTF-16!
Today I learnt that Lua projects often use *3* spaces for indentation! https://github.com/luarocks/lua-style-guide/blob/master/README.md#indentation-and-formatting
I initially thought something was very wrong with editor config.