![](/static/66c60d9f/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
these actions already admit defeat
these actions already admit defeat
but they have a lot more disadvantages for most scenarios (if you’re not a faang scale company, you probably don’t need them)
m
usually the commits at the end of the day when I haven’t finished a task yet. It will be squashed and disappear eventually.
the sound one makes while using them
lol. Of course there is. Ai cannot code. it’s a glorified autocomplete that mostly gets things subtly wrong. So you’ll spend more time trying to understand the code you didn’t write and look for any bugs, than if you had written and understood it yourself.
blind people exist.
blind people use computers.
Maybe she’s using accessibility tools to yogacode
i think the real explanation is simpler and more understandable.
NaN is what you get when you do something illegal like dividing by zero. There is no answer, but the operation has to result in something. So it gives you NaN, because the result is literally not a number
that doing more work, takes more time.
Gamers are especially guilty of this.
"that 2013 game runs at a smooth 60 fps. This medern game running at quadruple the resolution with raytracing sometimes dips to 58 fps on the same hardware. Devs must be lazy, they just need to add OPTIMIZATION to the game
i do use json instead of yaml precisely for the reasons you mentioned. That was my original point in the first place that json does not have these problems. something must have been lost in transmission
cut out a random piece of your document. is it a partial or a complete document?
paste it somewhere else in the document. you have to fix the indentation because if not then the document won’t work or mean something completely different
because of the cut and paste problem. It works in json.
write json with comments. Use a yaml parser.
lots of stuff that “windows can do” is due to 3rd party software too.
so, due to those gaps, it currently can’t do those things.
This argument boils down to “yes it could, if someone bothered to implement it”. Well… nobody has, so it can’t
i’d like to think that its operator detected the last incoming artillery shell.
but… but… RUST!!!
q. e. d.
\s
“built on an open web framework…”
hard pass then. Why the hell would I want to open a browser instance for a terminal???
actually those semicolons indicate this isn’t actually lua, they are invalid in table constructors afaik
the code is constructing a table, and passing it to a function called item. But if all you need is the data, you can just remove the function call and assign the table to a variable like so: local myvar = {…}.
then you can just manipulate the table as usual.
sometimes, a script needs to be edited in a plain text editor, without having access to an lsp or any other dev tools.