I’m tempted to publish an NPM package to do so as a joke, but I fear that it’d get used seriously
I’m tempted to publish an NPM package to do so as a joke, but I fear that it’d get used seriously
Oh wow, this is amazing info. Thanks!
I feel like this is a perfect encapsulation of how an experienced self-aware developer thinks. Experience really beats the hard stances out of you. I find myself saying “it depends” and “a bit of column A, bit of column B” often, like a cheap kids toy
His take strangely acknowledges that defects are caused by programmers, yet doesn’t want to improve the tools we use to help us not make these mistakes. In summary, git gud.
Experience has taught me that I’m awfully good at finding and firing foot guns, and when I use a language that has fewer foot guns along with good linting, I write reliable code because I tend to focus on what I want the code to do, not how to get there.
Declarative functional programming suits me down to the ground. OOP has been friendly to me, mostly, but it also has been the hardest to understand when I come back to it. Experience has given me an almost irrational aversion to side effects, and my simple mind considers class members as side effects
Yeah, this is my colleagues waiting for me, poor bastards
I thought that as long as the kernel is new enough, the Radeon driver should already be in the kernel
Annoyingly this feature isn’t available in Edge on Linux
Unfortunately the choice of desktop environment matters a lot when talking about features like this
I suggest trying KDE instead, as XFCE is far from the user friendly interface your used to with Windows. Some DEs are good for new users, XFCE isn’t one of them
Whoever suggested Xubuntu for a Windows user is a bit optimistic
The prompts to upgrade Office 365 every time my gaming PC updates really hurts after using a Linux machine all day