I recently got on git add -p
, which comes in clutch sometimes. But yeah, I’m definitely about to start doing the interactive add.
Also, squints at your username
I recently got on git add -p
, which comes in clutch sometimes. But yeah, I’m definitely about to start doing the interactive add.
Also, squints at your username
Hot take: the web should not be more human.
And I’m pretty progressive on technological matters. There should still be a clear separation, though.
In my opinion that’s a pretty generous list of reasons to buy a game without much further questioning or research. I think the last game I almost immediately bought ~10 minutes after hearing about it was YOMI Hustle for $5 in May of last year.
That said, looking through my purchase history I can tell you that the amount I have spent on Warframe, a F2P game, is vile.
Imagine going to take a shower to relax and instead seeing this.
Floating points included for thoroughness!
Pretty sure they’re referring to class names describing the visual style being applied, rather than what that class represents semantically.
E.g. .red-bold
vs. .error-text
I’m in this no-experience-to-apprenticeship program and everyone in my class thinks type coercion is the greatest thing ever.
The elephant and rope parable rings its bell of sound morals!
Not so much the realizing what NaN means; that’s more relevant to that XKCD which I probably don’t need to describe here.
Marked as solution.
Const goo =
backspace backspace
const Foo
backspace
const foo = obj. Val;.
*deep breaths
https://thedailywtf.com/articles/gotta-catch-em-all
Dear God.
try
{
/* ... some important code ... */
}
catch (OutOfMemoryException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (OverflowException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (InvalidCastException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (NullReferenceException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (IndexOutOfRangeException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (ArgumentException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (InvalidOperationException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (XmlException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (IOException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (NotSupportedException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (Exception exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
True Neutral
Could one argue that your conscious choice to not pick an RGB backlit keyboard is in part because of your aversion to it, therefore making it somewhat of an aesthe-
RGB == FPS bro
“They are dying; it is what it is.”
Easily hits one of the 10 things you do not want to hear the president of your country say.
You aren’t alone. I stopped posting to Reddit in the protest and haven’t posted/voted since, but old threads are just too useful to completely block it out.
The thing is, though, my Reddit usage from Google Search hasn’t replaced what used to be my time browsing Reddit. I now exclusively use it for informational old threads via Google Search.
If before API terms changes I spent 7 hours a week on Reddit, and let’s say 5% of that was needing Google search results from Reddit specifically and the other 95% of usage was scrolling through my Reddit front page; I am not now spending 7 hours on Reddit via Google search. I’m now only using that 5% of 7 hours/week = 21 minutes/week on Reddit, and maybe even less considering my newfound aversion to the website.
And I suspect that most of the people who stopped using Reddit after the changes—whether by lapse or by principle—are not gonna come crawling back to it if Reddit chooses to sever that tenuous metaphoric link.
Edit: clarified a subject
Least ignorant Redditor.
Truly the person of all time