Doesn't count as research imo. It's more speculation and musings. Research requires actual science.
The scientific method came around 1600s. Statistics existed in 1662. Science itself has not existed for a millenia.
rapamycin triggers the same effect as extreme caloric restriction. Neither of the solutions you mentioned have been scientifically verified in humans. Longevity research itself hasn't been around long enough to verify…
The answer to your question is rather obvious. But if you really like ORMs then you likely are hoping your comment serves as some form of revelation to me and this blinds you to the answer. Either way the answer is…
I don't like ORMs but there is a benefit here. Your where clause is re-usable. You can assign it to a variable and use it again somewhere else.
People usually switch to ORMs because they want to use in-language primitives for their application of choice. It's jarring and inelegant to switch between SQL and javascript or something like that. The problem with an…
Did not know this exists. Well I want it to fit in my pocket. A NUC can't.
What? This exists? Does it get all power from hdmi?
This is cool but phones have fit in my pocket for years. It's all about the form factor if you want a PC. I'm waiting for the PC that's the size of a thumb drive that you just put into any hdmi port. All peripherals…
> The benefit of consistency in this case would be that your git diffs aren't littered with irrelevant changes because someone prefers one convention and someone else prefers the other. If you didn't care about…
Consistency is an ocd thing. Being consistent is orthogonal to readability and modularity and extensibility. It's actually delusional. Most programmers want to be consistent based simply off a feeling but in actuality…
OP must've got a PR about this blocking him from merging. It's having me think about the way prs should be done on divisive topics. On one hand you have this "guy" who thinks he's gods gift to programming demanding a…
Doesn't count as research imo. It's more speculation and musings. Research requires actual science.
The scientific method came around 1600s. Statistics existed in 1662. Science itself has not existed for a millenia.
rapamycin triggers the same effect as extreme caloric restriction. Neither of the solutions you mentioned have been scientifically verified in humans. Longevity research itself hasn't been around long enough to verify…
The answer to your question is rather obvious. But if you really like ORMs then you likely are hoping your comment serves as some form of revelation to me and this blinds you to the answer. Either way the answer is…
I don't like ORMs but there is a benefit here. Your where clause is re-usable. You can assign it to a variable and use it again somewhere else.
People usually switch to ORMs because they want to use in-language primitives for their application of choice. It's jarring and inelegant to switch between SQL and javascript or something like that. The problem with an…
Did not know this exists. Well I want it to fit in my pocket. A NUC can't.
What? This exists? Does it get all power from hdmi?
This is cool but phones have fit in my pocket for years. It's all about the form factor if you want a PC. I'm waiting for the PC that's the size of a thumb drive that you just put into any hdmi port. All peripherals…
> The benefit of consistency in this case would be that your git diffs aren't littered with irrelevant changes because someone prefers one convention and someone else prefers the other. If you didn't care about…
Consistency is an ocd thing. Being consistent is orthogonal to readability and modularity and extensibility. It's actually delusional. Most programmers want to be consistent based simply off a feeling but in actuality…
OP must've got a PR about this blocking him from merging. It's having me think about the way prs should be done on divisive topics. On one hand you have this "guy" who thinks he's gods gift to programming demanding a…