Don’t really get your point here.
They virtualize the file because it’s big. They know the size.
It does indeed scale with the size of the file. That’s exactly the problem.
Don’t really get your point here.
They virtualize the file because it’s big. They know the size.
It does indeed scale with the size of the file. That’s exactly the problem.
Yeah feels a little stuck up lol
100% this.
The majority of the times if you are struggling with unit tests it’s because your code isn’t testable.
It felt weird at first writing code with tests in mind but, as you say, it makes your code much nicer to consume in the long run.
No it relies on the c# project files. It looks for all projectreference tags in the projects file and recursively grabs all of them and turns them into filters.
You have a list of filters like “src/libs/whatever/*” if there is a change the pipeline runs.
I wrote a tool that automatically updates these based on recursive project references (c#)
So if any project referenced by the service (or recursively referenced by dependencies) changes the service is rebuilt.
If pretty much gets compiled to a goto statement. Well more a jumpif but same principle
A certain world event being a 3rd party piece of software having a bad update.
We use a mono repo for a new cloud based solution. So far it’s been really great.
The shared projects are all in one place so we don’t have to kick things out to a package manager just to pull them back in.
We use filters in azure pipelines so things only get built if they or dependent projects get changed.
It makes big changes that span multiple projects effortless to implement.
Also running a local deployment is as easy as hitting run in the ide.
So far no problems at all.
What goes on between two or more non related consenting adults is no ones business but their own.
Your options are essentially to deal with it or ask them what’s up.
Personally I wouldn’t waste time with co-workers who are being rude.
They could be jealous of your position for some reason or taken offense to something random you did. They may just be assholes.
At the end of the day you’re there to work and if it doesn’t affect that I wouldn’t bother.
If they are increasingly hostile maybe have a quiet word with HR.
It literally has to run at that level to do it’s job.
You can improve it hugely. These things are very young.
There was a paper recently about removing the need for matrix multiplication from them which is a hugely expensive operation.
Dedicated hardware is also at a very early stage.
I guess if the code acted as if it got a valid response without checking it could get into a very weird state. Or the code just fails hard.
At the driver level it’s very easy to kill things.
Letting your employees work on what they like doesn’t seem like the worst thing. It might hurt game profits but seems much nicer for the workers.
Twitter runs a single web application.
They also do make games.
Sow do you plan to pay sites for the resources you use?
There had already been a few migrations as Reddit got more and more shit but that certainly caused a large one.
But that’s more key presses than just using existing keys