The monsters running away when wounded is a basic element in the Monster Hunter games, which are still very unique in how they present the relationship between the player character and the world.
Absolutely. Whenever I learn a new thing I'll always approach it from different angles - sources from people with varying skill levels (it can be useful to know how another beginner dealt with something!), video form, written text, reading the theory, seeing the applications, trying it yourself in various forms, different constraints etc. For example, since we're on hn - writing some data structure or algorithm you're learning in a few different languages. Doing all this helps massively with building up to true understanding.
(cooking - when learning a new recipe, I'll always find a few versions from reliable sources to compare, see what they have in common, and try to understand the reasoning behind differences)
I'm surprised how many comments in this thread swear by the position that you literally can't tell based on a picture, as if eating trick foods designed to mislead you was an everyday occurence. Most of the time in typical use you could make a reasonable guess, maybe with some obvious caveats such as "well idk if that Coke is Diet or not so"
Wait, I thought I've been seeing 'genuine question' a lot lately, but does that actually have anything to do with AI? I had assumed people were always annoying with it and it just so happened to bother me more recently
The highlights and fancy replacement preview are added by a plugin called anzu[0], but otherwise this is a standard emacs feature. I couldn't tell you what the default binding is but the function is query-replace-regexp.
(I don't understand why people are trying to bring multiple cursors into this)