> PS: Asking because I want to delve into a functional language but I cannot bring myself to do this seriously if it doesn't translate into market value.
learn a functional language because you want to learn a functional language. Learn whatever one sparks your interest.
It doesn't matter what one you learn because NONE of them have notable share in the job market. If you learn _any_ functional language you'll have a leg up on other applicants for _any_ functional language job because hardly anyone bothers to learn them. Also, there are so few jobs in functional programming that you're unlikely to get one anyway. So, again, just learn what you want to learn.
there's no way to prove that the cards bought on amazon account X were used for Mullvad account Y. That would require knowing the codes on the cards that amazon sold you, which no-one would.
all that can be said with certainty is:
1. that these people bought mullvad cards on amazon.
2. these mullvad accounts were paid with cards
All you can say is that 2 is a subset of 1.
If mullvad sells the cards literally anywhere else, then you can't even say that with certainty.
> Only more recently have I really realised this never applied to 99% of my (most people's?) use-cases.
every time someone asks "how do i accomplish X task on the command line" (witness literally thousands of Stack Overflow posts like this) the answer is in bash.
so, i say it applies to essentially every use case where you didn't already know how to do it.
I love fish, but the fact that every answer to your questions is written in another language and has to be translated affects EVERYONE.
useful if you want to take your colorful terminal output and share it on a web page, OR if you're really geeky you can write CLI tools with colored output, to summarize data then convert it to HTML, then to PDF and share it with your coworkers. (Chrome's command line interface is the best HTML to PDF converter I've found).
that just means Office 365 has a bug in it, not that using that feature is an "email hack"
the plus syntax is part of the email address specification. any server that doesn't support it is by definition buggy because some mail won't work as expected or designed.
what value is "safe" if your choices are all extremely limited in what they can do? And if you think you can't get malware past apple screening you're not thinking creatively enough.
learn a functional language because you want to learn a functional language. Learn whatever one sparks your interest.
It doesn't matter what one you learn because NONE of them have notable share in the job market. If you learn _any_ functional language you'll have a leg up on other applicants for _any_ functional language job because hardly anyone bothers to learn them. Also, there are so few jobs in functional programming that you're unlikely to get one anyway. So, again, just learn what you want to learn.