Using offline storage is the approach I use in most of my hobby projects. It's simpler, and faster (in developing and in usage) and there are no loading screens. In my kindle-clippings-manager…
Browser for Kindle highlights: https://github.com/karlosos/kindle_clippings_webapp - No account needed - Importing `My Clippings.txt` from your Kindle, exporting as json or markdown - Browsing highlights from books,…
In what scenarios it would be beneficial to rewrite the Django app in Go? Do you mean something specific when saying that Go would be good replacement?. I/O heavy or computation heavy service?
Could you elaborate more on how you approached testing the applications that use tRPC? I was looking for example big projects that use tRPC but they don't have tests [0]. I am wondering what you mean by testing calls…
I have located the first commit in the bitcoin/bitcoin repo on GitHub [1]. However, there is no single occurrence of "Poker". In the original-bitcoin repo I've found CPokerLobbyDialogBase class [2]. So I can partially…
Using offline storage is the approach I use in most of my hobby projects. It's simpler, and faster (in developing and in usage) and there are no loading screens. In my kindle-clippings-manager…
Browser for Kindle highlights: https://github.com/karlosos/kindle_clippings_webapp - No account needed - Importing `My Clippings.txt` from your Kindle, exporting as json or markdown - Browsing highlights from books,…
In what scenarios it would be beneficial to rewrite the Django app in Go? Do you mean something specific when saying that Go would be good replacement?. I/O heavy or computation heavy service?
Could you elaborate more on how you approached testing the applications that use tRPC? I was looking for example big projects that use tRPC but they don't have tests [0]. I am wondering what you mean by testing calls…
I have located the first commit in the bitcoin/bitcoin repo on GitHub [1]. However, there is no single occurrence of "Poker". In the original-bitcoin repo I've found CPokerLobbyDialogBase class [2]. So I can partially…