There are plenty of environments where deviating from spec (even when fixing an apparently trivial bug) would not be ok without assessing the situation for potential unintended behaviors. High-risk systems where a…
> Poor programmers do things like allowing an incoming request to spin up unlimited concurrent threads. Poor programmers erroneously throw exceptions on any operational deviation - even it if can be handled without…
I had issues with urxvt and ended up moving to Kitty (https://github.com/kovidgoyal/kitty). I'm not impressed with its' autoupdate feature, but it can be disabled. Apart from that a few visual bugs which are probably to…
Thats cool! I'm not sure where it comes from, but I get similar behavior in zsh with 'cd ....' - similar doesn't happen in bash though. I mapped 'cd' to 'c' in my bashrc, but while doing it I also mapped 'c' to execute…
I spend loads of time in a shell. One day I'll push my full dotfiles publicly, but until then here's a few snippets I've found super handy. I'd advise against using them verbatim but there's a few things in there that…
There are plenty of environments where deviating from spec (even when fixing an apparently trivial bug) would not be ok without assessing the situation for potential unintended behaviors. High-risk systems where a…
> Poor programmers do things like allowing an incoming request to spin up unlimited concurrent threads. Poor programmers erroneously throw exceptions on any operational deviation - even it if can be handled without…
I had issues with urxvt and ended up moving to Kitty (https://github.com/kovidgoyal/kitty). I'm not impressed with its' autoupdate feature, but it can be disabled. Apart from that a few visual bugs which are probably to…
Thats cool! I'm not sure where it comes from, but I get similar behavior in zsh with 'cd ....' - similar doesn't happen in bash though. I mapped 'cd' to 'c' in my bashrc, but while doing it I also mapped 'c' to execute…
I spend loads of time in a shell. One day I'll push my full dotfiles publicly, but until then here's a few snippets I've found super handy. I'd advise against using them verbatim but there's a few things in there that…