

We really all need to get along and accept each others’ opinions. Even if some people are completely wrong and think mutable by default it OK. Hehe.


We really all need to get along and accept each others’ opinions. Even if some people are completely wrong and think mutable by default it OK. Hehe.


Glad to help. Have fun!


You need to be able to pull or build the images on the other machine. At a company you would use a private container image registry on something like GitHub, GitLab or JFrog.
Setting up a GitLab instance is a really cool homelab project that can also go on your portfolio.
Develop on your workstation, push to the registry on machine B, pull from that and run on machine B


That’s a pretty cool flex, I gotta say.


I’ve taken to writing .http files which are runnable on a number of IDEs and plugins. I don’t need to know what anybody else is using to run them, they live with the code and I’m happy.
That said, I’ve seen people on QA do really cool end-to-end tests at load via very approachable scripting on Postman.
There’s lots of room for “to each their own” here.
I learned to let you all squabble amongst yourselves and get the answer. Since every question is a duplicate, it stands to reason the question I have has already been answered.
A Project Manager just earned their wings.


Let’s all just wait for the new versions of languages, frameworks and operating systems. LLMs won’t have been trained on those and won’t have answers, people not asking each other online will generate no answers to train on.
Let’s read and train on docs, right? Yeah, right.


I’ve seen some very excited sponsor spots for them on YouTube. CDNs often make ads load faster than videos, so who knows what kind of innovations they could be financing. All of them perfectly privacy preserving, of course…


Thanks, I was confused about why the helix editor might need screen sharing. Haha.


I guess I’ll take another look in there. The instructions for turning off Copilot on stack overflow keep needing updates, so I wonder if I’ll even find the same settings you’d looked it.
I’m in a game of cat and mouse with Microsoft, but - like I said below - I don’t want to switch to a fork at work.


I’m using Helix at home, but I need to be able to collaborate with people with different priorities at work without starting with “it’s similar to Vim, but it’s built in Rust.” It’s important to me to be able to recommend extensions and everything.


Sure, it’s:
123 Mulberry '); DROP TABLE Deliveries;–


I love how the documentation is in the actual .h file and the read me is a mere formality.
I’m disappointed I didn’t get this as a floppy in the mail.


Isn’t that the point of languages like Snap?


A good reminder that composition is a useful concept.


I mean, if you want your prints to be asynchronous you’re looking for trouble to begin with.
The previous statement is a joke.
Ah, yes: weaponizing cybersecurity requirements to trick - I mean “motivate” - higher management to do things “right.”
My thought as well, but those stones were shaped to match each other, reducing the amount of grout needed. It just goes to show the old ways still work, but you have to commit.
I still understand the argument of the C greybeard to Rust knowledge gap though. Objectivity, it’s hard to argue for a spidey sense that took years or decades to develop vs a deterministic and strict compiler, but developer (and reviewer) experience often seems to be rooted in personal comfort* more than in language features.
That said, we all have to deal with transitions and learning consistently leads to better outcomes. The argument is sound, but the pragmatic dynamics may take some time.
*”personal comfort“ doesn’t mean the language or tools are somehow objectively comfortable, but that people feel good, confident, productive, and happy working with them. Just yesterday I was thinking that I like the Gir “is hard” - it stimulates my brain on a daily basis. Different people get that in different ways.