If you add one of these type checkers into your CI or a pre-commit hook, it provides the same guarantees you get from a compiler along with the same tooling benefits. It gives you the option of using the structure when…
Funny thing is that it wasn't too late. Netflix was weeks away from running out of money because blockbuster was eating their lunch, but then blockbuster killed dvd by mail because a dumb exec thought physical stores…
It probably depends pretty heavily on your workflow. MacOS is designed around doing things visually with a trackpad. If you don't want to work that way, you're just out of luck, because that's the "right way" and if you…
And for my area it is very high. I live in a cheap midwest town and according to this, the difference between here and San Francisco is only 30k a year.
You do realize that it's possible to ask AI to write code and then read the code yourself to ensure it's valid, right? I usually try to strip the pointless comments, but it's not the end of the world if people leave…
Are you serious? The people most pushing for this are precisely the ones trying to raise a family.
That's literally the opposite of what this documentation is explaining. System containers exist. You can run the entire userspace of an OS (including systemd) in a container.
Strong agree here. I learned Go after having worked in large typed Python code bases, and Go feels like a HUGE step backwards typing-wise.
https://areweanticheatyet.com/ Anything "denied" won't work ever unless they change their minds. Anything "broken" is...well...broken.
If it actually is stronger than a simple request, I could see saying "an ask" as a way of demanding using softer language. If your boss were to say "I demand ...", everybody is going to say they're a demanding jerk, but…
How is a "PR comments" commit useful to you? If I'm looking at history, it's usually to see: 1. What caused a bug 2. Context around a feature and why it was written a certain way Seeing a "PR comments" commit just turns…
Rewriting history on main is bad. Rewriting history everywhere else is completely normal and should be encouraged. I don't want your "oops typo LOL" commits in main. I don't want a history that looks like "refactor…
> Honestly, squash merges are frequently a sign of people who lack mastery in Git itself or make no effort to produce high-quality independent commits. So literally any open source project that accepts external…
Data caps (and services being excluded from them) are different though, aren't they? IIRC these were already happening before net neutrality rules were removed.
There are occasional things that might cause us to work an evening or weekend here or there or spend a week or two working more like 50-60 hours a week to meet a deadline. As long as it's rare, that's probably not…
I've considered it. I live in the northern parts of the country (WI). I have children that walk to school. Anything other than permanent DST is absolutely asinine to me. Most people do things in the evening. Very few…
I once worked for a company with a name like CompanyCloud and wound up sending an email to a customer saying I worked for CompanyButt. That was an embarrassing day.
You'd probably have a lot better luck with Ubuntu or something that isn't rolling. Rolling and bleeding edge distros like Arch have a tendency to break more often when updating.
Reductio ad absurdum is a great way to prove or disprove your point is valid.
until Reddit thinks it'll be funny to try and get Rick Astley to the top of every single recommendation.
Your machine would be showing an extra outbound connection.
I like the look of those, but I did laugh when I saw the cell phone with an antenna on the top.
If you add one of these type checkers into your CI or a pre-commit hook, it provides the same guarantees you get from a compiler along with the same tooling benefits. It gives you the option of using the structure when…
Funny thing is that it wasn't too late. Netflix was weeks away from running out of money because blockbuster was eating their lunch, but then blockbuster killed dvd by mail because a dumb exec thought physical stores…
It probably depends pretty heavily on your workflow. MacOS is designed around doing things visually with a trackpad. If you don't want to work that way, you're just out of luck, because that's the "right way" and if you…
And for my area it is very high. I live in a cheap midwest town and according to this, the difference between here and San Francisco is only 30k a year.
You do realize that it's possible to ask AI to write code and then read the code yourself to ensure it's valid, right? I usually try to strip the pointless comments, but it's not the end of the world if people leave…
Are you serious? The people most pushing for this are precisely the ones trying to raise a family.
That's literally the opposite of what this documentation is explaining. System containers exist. You can run the entire userspace of an OS (including systemd) in a container.
Strong agree here. I learned Go after having worked in large typed Python code bases, and Go feels like a HUGE step backwards typing-wise.
https://areweanticheatyet.com/ Anything "denied" won't work ever unless they change their minds. Anything "broken" is...well...broken.
If it actually is stronger than a simple request, I could see saying "an ask" as a way of demanding using softer language. If your boss were to say "I demand ...", everybody is going to say they're a demanding jerk, but…
How is a "PR comments" commit useful to you? If I'm looking at history, it's usually to see: 1. What caused a bug 2. Context around a feature and why it was written a certain way Seeing a "PR comments" commit just turns…
Rewriting history on main is bad. Rewriting history everywhere else is completely normal and should be encouraged. I don't want your "oops typo LOL" commits in main. I don't want a history that looks like "refactor…
> Honestly, squash merges are frequently a sign of people who lack mastery in Git itself or make no effort to produce high-quality independent commits. So literally any open source project that accepts external…
Data caps (and services being excluded from them) are different though, aren't they? IIRC these were already happening before net neutrality rules were removed.
There are occasional things that might cause us to work an evening or weekend here or there or spend a week or two working more like 50-60 hours a week to meet a deadline. As long as it's rare, that's probably not…
I've considered it. I live in the northern parts of the country (WI). I have children that walk to school. Anything other than permanent DST is absolutely asinine to me. Most people do things in the evening. Very few…
I once worked for a company with a name like CompanyCloud and wound up sending an email to a customer saying I worked for CompanyButt. That was an embarrassing day.
You'd probably have a lot better luck with Ubuntu or something that isn't rolling. Rolling and bleeding edge distros like Arch have a tendency to break more often when updating.
Reductio ad absurdum is a great way to prove or disprove your point is valid.
until Reddit thinks it'll be funny to try and get Rick Astley to the top of every single recommendation.
Your machine would be showing an extra outbound connection.
I like the look of those, but I did laugh when I saw the cell phone with an antenna on the top.