Thats just a different kind of coffeine, no?
Mate, coffee and tea (or was it cacao, coffee and tea) seperately developed a coffein-like substance.
Thats just a different kind of coffeine, no?
Mate, coffee and tea (or was it cacao, coffee and tea) seperately developed a coffein-like substance.
Ofcourse Numpad Arrows
or how Quake players would do
LMouse A RMouse D (shoot=Space or Alt)
You can not come in here with your nice colleagues and reasonable work experience. I guess it is a big corp vs small company experience.


So wie Menschen, können auch Zahlen integer sein.
Doesn’t chatgpy remember the context of the previous question and text?
Maybe a difference in accounts and llms makes a bigget difference.


VS, VSCode, Sublime, Neovim,
I use Sublime for short scripts in Python, VSCode for angular|typescript, VS for c# and neovim for elixir, elm and all new stuff I learn on my own.
If you only need something like buttons, sliders and other simpel, non-user-account driven stuff, than Streamlit.io is an option.
A simple requirements.txt and shipping your Python app with an .bat or .sh that just does:
open venv start main.py in venv closr venv
should be a hood intermediate step from cli script to gui
You then see people making scripts that take days to run, but it’s fine, they’re only going to use it twice and are busy enough to be able to wait
Sponsored by “terrible python code by Matt Parker”
The OG solution was to use stretched 4:3/resolution, nyt Arx Libertatis allows easy casting with modern resolution.
and on the other side is game dev, where it is kind of expected to get content before weekend…and the reason they are paid well, right? right? >_>


before i let the people win with “summer time all year”, i am ready for the 12h offset in the 24h system


A,B,C,D - A talks to B, C listens to A,…
Alice, Bob, Charlie,…
For this reason the first persona in my software is always Alice Litte, alice@wonderland.uk. Easier than “asfgg afshd”
Before studying CS, I recognized it as ‘the bioware puzzle’. They were probably copying their own scribbles fron back then.
Haskell was the hardest, but it looked the most beautiful.
Yeah, certain code developed organically (aka shifting demands). Devs know the code gets worse, but either by time or money they don’t have the option to review and redo code.