![](/static/66c60d9f/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/170721ad-9010-470f-a4a4-ead95f51f13b.png)
Had to explain that to my nephew. He couldn’t save anything because iCloud was full. His Mac had like 300gigs available, but he couldn’t save anything…
Had to explain that to my nephew. He couldn’t save anything because iCloud was full. His Mac had like 300gigs available, but he couldn’t save anything…
I thought that would lead me to a das keyboard.
I think xamarin has been replaced with MAUI.
Kotlin and Swift have similar syntax and neither are like Python to be honest. If I were to pick one, Kotlin all the way. You can do a fair amount of back-end work with itas well.
These days, you have several options. You could use JavaScript/Typescript via React Native which builds both iOS and Android.
You could use Kotlin Multi-Platform, builds both iOS and Android, vut I believe you will need to know some Kotlin for Android and Swift for iOS.
You could use Flutter, which uses the Dart programming language, also builds both iOS and Android.
Then there is MAUI using C#, builds both iOS and Android.
Finally, you could resort to native for each platform.
As you can see, there are plenty of options. Picking one comes down to what you need and which language works for you. Keep in mind, most of the languages aren’t really close to Python.
Good luck.
Thank, you, a, lot.
That’s my favorite. Windows down on a cold day with the heater on, just randomly driving about, especially with no where to got.
A loaf of bread.
Here is what is planted. I have three others, a ginko dwarf, a Chief Joseph Lodgepole Pine, and one other, but the name eludes me.
Obviously very early in my collection, but enjoying the mini tree garden so far.
I began collecting dwarf trees. They typically range in max height no larger than 12 ft. But most are under 2 feet.
I don’t know a single religious person who took it seriously. So that’s probably why they thought it was fine.
That was just an example haha. I spend money on buy it for life cookware, buy it honestly hasn’t been a lot. Cast iron is actually fairly cheap if you can find a deal. Plus, I visit estate sales and often find quality on the cheap.
The phrase don’t let good be the enemy of perfect doesn’t apply to everything.
For example, in surgery, you do want a perfect result usually. But in software, you want to ship the product and get features into users hands so investors give you more funding, so you may not ship a pixel perfect product, but it’s good enough, so you focus on speed and not perfection.
I feel like gambling fits here. Or risk taking. But excessive risk is usually considered gambling.
Most things. Clothes, cookware, phones, TV’s, etc.
I would say only spend money to buy things you’re passionate about. I love cooking and have spent some money on quality ingredients. Buy good spices and pans, erc. But I hardly spend money on clothing or vehicles or phones, etc.
I would say if you’re not sure if you’ll use it, borrow it first. If you keep borrowing something, then buy a nice one.
+1 for Kotlin. You’ll pick it up fairly fast if you uave used Java.
6 flags was fun as an adult.
It’s a wild slope.