Using an LLM to come up with function names for transpiled code would be a good idea, but other than that. Nope.
Using an LLM to come up with function names for transpiled code would be a good idea, but other than that. Nope.
I’d probably use selenium. But that depends.
Just out of curiosity: which do you think is closer to Python? Kotlin or Swift?
Not knowing wither, my hunch would be to say Kotlin. But I am curious.
And limited to 25 years. This 100 years is bull shit.
Yeah. Standard rejection emails are good. I have gotten some really nice rejection emails. I haven’t dwelt on them long enough to know what sets them apart.
I have gotten a couple of rejections and thought: huh, I forgot I applied there. I have been wanting to do a diagram like this for my current job hunt, but I think I am getting a higher percentage of rejections than OP.
Waaaay out of your proce range, but I absolutely love the Keyboardio Model 100 . https://shop.keyboard.io/products/model-100 it’s a really freaking amazing keyboard. The palm key makes typing the brackets and braces and others so much easier.
Great keyboard. I love it.
This guy’s got tiger blood.
What is it about go that doesn’t feel good? I have this feeling myself.
I didn’t enjoy parsing JSON with Go, and I the documentation sucked. But it was really really easy to stand up a simple API endpoint. I would have reached for go for the project I am currently working on, but it didn’t have the libraries I needed. It’s interesting.
And as Teams continue to downgrade it’s markdown support, it is becoming less and less appealing. I hate that I can’t add language tags to code block with the triple back ticks, but it turns some of my code snippets to emojis. What the fuck man?
Maybe it’s because I have only ever been in free plan slack channe’s, but I have never understood the appeal. Maybe it’s the bots? I looked into making a teams bot, and it was a horrendous experience.
Your not wrong. But hot take: it’s better than slack.
This is an interesting article. I don’t know anything about kernel development, but I wonder if it’s still true?
And sometimes coding habits are obtuse to people with different coding habits. These habits aren’t bad per service, but can be difficult to grok.
Oh. Good one. Markdown everywhere. Slack always pissed me off for it’s sub par markdown support.