Nobody would give a damn about it.
Also Polars.
FYI: QALY = quality-adjusted life year[0] [0] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quality-adjusted_life_year
> It was literally built with guardrails to keep enterprise coders from getting too creative Just as Go.
> I also guess his main concern with Flash was, that he couldn't control the proprietary plattform. Oh, the irony.
You can use ArchUnit[1] or similar frameworks to impose the constraints. [1]: https://www.archunit.org/
What are you talking about exactly? iOS GMail App > Settings > Default Apps You cannot choose Firefox or Brave but you certainly can choose Safari.
I share your frustration. However, it makes sense, if you think about it. Having to give a note a title makes you think it through, and with Zettelkasten you can easily split it into many atomic notes, each covering…
> Arbitrary rules like line width (and I assure you, those rules ARE arbitrary) help exactly 0 people per day, and cause problems for more than 0 people per day. Linters' line length rules solve a problem of useless…
1.2 Europe's 740 million people speak in at least 24 languages. This makes it much more difficult to scale internationally. That's why there's so many doppelgänger companies in different EU countries — it's more likely…
Nobody would give a damn about it.
Also Polars.
FYI: QALY = quality-adjusted life year[0] [0] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quality-adjusted_life_year
> It was literally built with guardrails to keep enterprise coders from getting too creative Just as Go.
> I also guess his main concern with Flash was, that he couldn't control the proprietary plattform. Oh, the irony.
You can use ArchUnit[1] or similar frameworks to impose the constraints. [1]: https://www.archunit.org/
What are you talking about exactly? iOS GMail App > Settings > Default Apps You cannot choose Firefox or Brave but you certainly can choose Safari.
I share your frustration. However, it makes sense, if you think about it. Having to give a note a title makes you think it through, and with Zettelkasten you can easily split it into many atomic notes, each covering…
> Arbitrary rules like line width (and I assure you, those rules ARE arbitrary) help exactly 0 people per day, and cause problems for more than 0 people per day. Linters' line length rules solve a problem of useless…
1.2 Europe's 740 million people speak in at least 24 languages. This makes it much more difficult to scale internationally. That's why there's so many doppelgänger companies in different EU countries — it's more likely…