I never used sync on reddit (was on boost) The dark overlay feature is absolutely amazing for me
Personally I don’t pay for ultra and don’t really notice the ads
I never used sync on reddit (was on boost) The dark overlay feature is absolutely amazing for me
Personally I don’t pay for ultra and don’t really notice the ads
I really love it! Works better than jerboa on my side.
But waiting for “boost for lemmy” and I’ll see then
Try connect for lemmy, you can enable notifications
Hi, you can look into “discrete mathematics” if you’re interested in the overall subject of math for programmers, it was one of my hardest class but highly intesting!
Well I’m not acquainted with Apk tool, but I understand a bit about reverse engineering, so I went on their github page to read about it.
Essentially, an android application is packaged under the .APK extension which lets you install and run the application on your phone. This is akin to a software with the .exe extension on windows. An .apk or .exe is a bunch of compiled code and ressources, this means that in this form, the code is mostly a bunch of mumbo jumbo that no one can understand or make edit to.
By reverse engineering, you transform the .apk to it’s initial state before compilation, the code is now organised, readable, and editable. This allows you to understand what is going on under hood and add new code and functionnalities. If you decide to edit the code, you can package/compile this extended application into a new .APK and enjoy additionnal features in the application.
Note that reverse engineering will not get you an exact copy of the code and file structures the original developper created, it is (in general) an approximation. Depending on the decompiler, you can lose variables names, function names…etc, but the code will work fine.
For an example
If the original developper had this function. private String getAge(String userId) { String age = this.users.get(userId); return age; }
Decompiling might get you :
private String getAge(String var1) { String var2 = this.var3.get(var1); return var2; }
You get the code, but it’s harder to understand than if you had the original code. So reverse engineering / decompiling is useful in some use cases, but not always a miracle.