I’m using value in the loosest sense, like how all objects are values.
So now if you have three implementations of IProductService
, how do you know which one is configured?
I’m using value in the loosest sense, like how all objects are values.
So now if you have three implementations of IProductService
, how do you know which one is configured?
I’m not exactly sure what you mean. Doesn’t all dependency injection work the way I described?
Without being familiar with the framework, you can’t trace your way from the class getting injected into to the configuration, even if you’re experienced with the language.
Dependency injection is so much worse. Oh, hey, where’d this value come from? Giant blob of opaque reflection code.
That’s absolutely true. What’s hard and what’s easy in programming is so completely foreign to non-programmers.
Wait, you can guess my password in under a week but you can’t figure out how to pack a knapsack?
If you haven’t already, take a peek at Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality. It’s fanfiction, but absolutely worth a read.
This doesn’t hold. Commit signature is a feature of git itself, even though the article chooses to focus on GitHub. And afaik github integration of signatures doesn’t break code hosting elsewhere, GH merely allows you to register your GPG signature with them so they’re able to validate the commits, but the author is still able to enroll the same GPG key to other hosts.
Not only that, but GitHub rewrites signatures on rebase (and sometimes on fast forward merge) with their own private key. Using signatures on GitHub is basically pointless.
There’s https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/privacynotincluded/ for privacy, at least.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ares I think? Don’t understand the quotes though.
wingtk should work, though it’s been a few years since I tried it. What happened?
I’m upvoting you, but I’m not happy about it.
The Nox and Tollan were way more Prime Directive than the Asgard.
The real interesting debate is between ((f) 1)
and f()(1)
.
It used to be AGPL, now it’s SSPL.
I meant a timer on your TV to turn itself off, so you don’t get woken up by the end credits
Sounds like you need a sleep timer of 30 minutes
Hits close to home.
A VPN does this, but for your internet connection:
It takes a lot of money, planning, and technical know-how to build a nuclear power plant, especially a safe one. It isn’t like a new nuclear company can just pop into existence, and start offering reactors for sale.
Traditional nuclear reactors are, therefore, a technology that requires a lot of centralization to implement. Only nation-states and huge corporations can assemble the resources to construct them.
Compare that to wind or hydro-electric power. You can build a generator with some wire and magnets yourself, so you could call them more decentralized.
This might be changing with modular reactors, I don’t know.
Germany has been anti-nuclear for some time, unfortunately. That could be what the above poster was referring to?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-nuclear_movement_in_Germany
Here’s a language that does bash and Windows batch files: https://github.com/batsh-dev-team/Batsh
I haven’t used either tool, so I can’t recommend one over the other.