Is this like the shiny variant?
Nah I don’t have any more examples cuz I haven’t been using vim for like 30 years. I think the other comments make good points tho
I use vim bindings in vscode, but I’m trying to switch to neovim.
It’s hard to talk about efficiencies without use cases but here’s some that I like:
Before scraping I would verify that there is no HTTP API that you can use to craft requests instead of scraping from the website. These might be higher quality than what you can scrape. If there is no easy to use http API, go to scraping then. I would generally consider scraping the last option, unless it’s a ridiculously easy website to scrape.
I heard there are quantum computing libraries in Python if that interests you!
If I were you I’d browse PyPi for any packages that look cool.
Oh, I didn’t realize a lot of people actually believed that I just figured they were being hyperbolic.
I wouldn’t take the meme so literally that they’re only talking about current quarter profits, but just that they want growth in general.
I’m in favor of people doing what they like with their devices. I’ve done a lot of… interesting things but the thought of putting an nsfw image as my home screen is kind of weird
This is so bad I can’t look away
@Mistral@lemmings.world where in the world is Carmen San Diego?
I watched this thinking it was gonna give my inner teenager a kick but it was so good. It still gave my inner teenager a kick.
Damn I was wrong my b. Haha at least now I know Firefox doesn’t work everywhere, I appreciate it.
What stops you from finding extensions that implement similar functionality? I know tree style tabs are pretty popular instead of tab grouping. This also so the first time I’ve heard of sync or pinned tabs not working. I’m kinda curious ab ur setup if youd be cool with sharing that? I feel like it might be a setup problem instead of a software one.
What was the downgrade in usability you saw? I used to be an avid chrome user turned Firefox, but I would say the opposite.
Oh I commented before that my b
What happened
I feel like there’s a way to get around that… Like if you really wanted, some sort of system to Photoshop the keyword onto the piece of paper. This would allow you to generate the image but also not have to worry ab the AI generating that.
Edit: also does anyone remember that one paper that had to do with a new AI architecture where you could put in some sort of negative image to additionally prompt an AI for a specific shape, output, or position.
So rude for not dropping the link for that duck in the post tsk tsk tsk
The article made a few good points, but a good amount of it was conjecture. I liked the part about comparing the two functions and showing that exceptions are faster but I think a big thing he’s not getting is readability. Even in the functions he showed, you can directly see that the one using std::expected has the happy path and error path directly in the function signature, whereas the exception one doesn’t.
As for the “error kind” trap he was talking about, that definitely exists, but ignores the fact that you can also get this same kind of error from exceptions. I’ve definitely gotten exceptions that I didn’t understand from Python or Java libraries, but it’s not a problem with exceptions but a problem with how they’re shown. If there’s nothing to tell me that I should have thought of that error, it shouldn’t be an expectation for a dev to have thought of it.