Replace all of the ref with relrefs

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Danila Fedorin 2022-03-09 22:03:33 -08:00
parent f719cedc37
commit 21ca8e5e90
3 changed files with 4 additions and 4 deletions

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@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ title: Learning Emulation, Part 2
date: 2016-11-23 23:23:18.664038
tags: ["C and C++", "Emulation"]
---
_This is the second post in a series I'm writing about Chip-8 emulation. If you want to see the first one, head [here]({{< ref "/blog/01_learning_emulation.md" >}})._
_This is the second post in a series I'm writing about Chip-8 emulation. If you want to see the first one, head [here]({{< relref "/blog/01_learning_emulation.md" >}})._
Now that we have an understanding of the physical capabilities of a Chip-8 system, we can write code that will represent such a system on our computer. In this post we'll start writing some basic code - be prepared.

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@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ title: Learning Emulation, Part 2.5 - Implementation
date: 2016-11-23 23:23:56.633942
tags: ["C and C++", "Emulation"]
---
_This is the third post in a series I'm writing about Chip-8 emulation. If you want to see the first one, head [here]({{< ref "/blog/01_learning_emulation.md" >}})._
_This is the third post in a series I'm writing about Chip-8 emulation. If you want to see the first one, head [here]({{< relref "/blog/01_learning_emulation.md" >}})._
In the previous part of this tutorial, we created a type to represent a basic Chip-8 machine. However, we've done nothing to make it behave like one! Let's start working on that.

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@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ GHC IDE is a Haskell-based program that uses the
{{< sidenote "right" "lsp-note" "language server protocol" >}}
You don't really need to know what the language server protocol (LSP) is
to use GHC IDE. If you are nonetheless interested, I wrote a little
bit about it <a href="{{< ref "/blog/haskell_language_server" >}}#prelude-language-server-protocol">in the previous iteration of this post.</a>
bit about it <a href="{{< relref "/blog/haskell_language_server" >}}#prelude-language-server-protocol">in the previous iteration of this post.</a>
If you want more information, check out the <a href="https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/">official Microsoft page on LSP.</a>
{{< /sidenote >}} to communicate with any editor that supports it. Editors
with support the the LSP include Atom, Visual Studio Code, Emacs, and Vim. Thus,
@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ export PATH=$PATH:/home/<yourusername>/.local/bin
On Windows, this is done by
{{< sidenote "right" "path-note" "editing your PATH variable." >}}
If you need to know how to change your <code>PATH</code>, I wrote
about it briefly in the <a href="{{< ref "/blog/haskell_language_server" >}}
about it briefly in the <a href="{{< relref "/blog/haskell_language_server" >}}
#installation-of-v0-5-0-0-windows-systems">previous iteration of this post.</a>
{{< /sidenote >}} I don't run Windows,
so I don't know where `cabal install` will place the executable, but I do know