Didn’t crunchyroll used to be exactly that kind of website they’re getting taken down now? Lame…
Didn’t crunchyroll used to be exactly that kind of website they’re getting taken down now? Lame…
How does the math work out on that? Both are fairly mature, I don’t believe that either application takes a considerable amount of development effort to maintain. And taking features from Wordpad and putting them into Notepad has a time and effort cost.
What’s a sane, dynamically typed language?
I prefer a hybrid approach. A document explaining some common things to do and generally the idea behind why the API is structured that way (shows me you actually thought about it, and makes it more logical to find different parts of it without necessarily looking it up), and then an API spec showing all the parameters.
Not to rub it in, but in my forties could be read as almost the entirety of the modern web was developed during my adulthood.
From the stories I’ve heard from corporate software employees, this does sound like exactly the kind of thing you gotta do to show some manager the guy is buddy-buddy with that they’re actually not doing their job. And even then they didn’t listen.
We have to work under the assumption that most development is done by inexperienced or, to put it bluntly, bad programmers. I would MUCH rather have bad JS code than bad assembly. One may crash a single tab in my browser, the other may crash my entire computer.
This level of effort is probably geared more towards those who create the torrents, not those who consume them.
Assuming you put everything important in home, that is…
Reminds me of my git commit messages!
It’s the quickest way to prove to yourself that you know what you’re doing… Most of the time, anyway…
And the of is an optional field for if they have an onlyfans
I’m imagining a scenario where you’re working on a feature that changes the DB state (e.x. introduces a new DB migration that changes some columns) and the bug is on an unrelated part of the code from your feature. In this hypothetical, going back to the state of the upstream branch would make your local environment non functional, and the bug is on an unrelated part of the code. Fairly specific scenario but hey, you can worktree for that. It’s not particularly thorough, though.
I think they meant “all of this is what might happen next”
But yeah even then social media will still continue to somehow have an ever increasing number of “users”
I sympathize with this. People on the spectrum already have a hard time just living, then they have the extra hurdle of having a hard time communicating their hard time. It feels very human to want to hide the struggle, it makes you feel more like you belong in the world and that you are just one of the other billions out there being “normal” and doing “normal” things. That’s a longing that I’ve felt, but I’m fortunate enough to not have felt it to the degree your father seems to have. I hope you and your brother find a way to get through to him.
I personally go for “wizzywig” but to each their own.
I mean, it’s just like collecting baseball cards. Just because I enjoy collecting them, doesn’t mean I inherently have to jerk off to them more than the next guy
I believe they call that ~ ~ a m b i e n c e ~ ~
Serious question, is there actually a FOSS project out there at the scale of something like Firefox that survives on only donations?