Simpler to keep everything in one compose file if you can, under a test
service that doesn’t build unless explicitly named
Un-weird that env var and use the normal, boring feature of defining environment
under your test
service
Simpler to keep everything in one compose file if you can, under a test
service that doesn’t build unless explicitly named
Un-weird that env var and use the normal, boring feature of defining environment
under your test
service
I’ve often been able to alias drun='docker compose run --rm --build'
and simplify down to:
drun test
Should be able to encode all those wayward args into docker-compose.yml
or Dockerfile
and only use vanilla docker commands – that’s the whole point of containerization
In the US? IMO only possible in exclusive environments similar to saunas at spas or membership-based clubs/gyms
One of the best tutorials on really “grokking” git
concepts, and it’s online and interactive: https://learngitbranching.js.org
For programming, start with buildings things for yourself. Be practical, start small, and iterate, regardless if you consider the previous iteration was a success or failure. I’ve heard good things about https://automatetheboringstuff.com/ (in Python) in this regard.
Can address it by writing code that doesn’t depend much on indentation, which also makes code more linear and easier to follow.
Idgi – is it saying that every game is either named “X” or “Y’s X”?
All methods? Of course not. Just methods like these.
I really dislike code like that. Code like that tends to lie about what it says it does and have non-explicit interactions/dependencies.
The only thing I can really be certain from that is:
doAnything();
if(doAnything2()) {
doAnything3();
}
I.e. almost nothing at all because the abstractions aren’t useful.
I agree with the author overall, and I think it can be more straightforwardly stated. IMO it’s the idea that wrong abstractions are even worse than other ills like duplication or god classes/modules. It’s also reminiscent of “modules should be deep”.
I’ve heard of publishing software to design photo albums/scrapbooks/cards etc. Is there a photo collection manager for archiving, sorting and filtering?
Given access to a large set of personal photos, say tens of thousands, it should be able to group, categorize, tag, and sort along a myriad of dimensions.
Example dimensions would be time, people and places. It would need some facial recognition/image classifier/similarity scoring capability.
There definitely are some cloud offerings today that do similar things, but I’d want it to work locally for privacy and practical reasons.
If it takes 1+ hours of work to remove a feature flag branch in an area of code, I wouldn’t trust the correctness of anything the AI writes and would be super skeptical about anything the humans had written.
The synchronization problem (flakiness and all the waits) is tricky to get right. Browsers are concurrent systems, and programming around one is specialized enough that many devs don’t do it well, e.g. IMO if you’re adding ad-hoc waits or nesting timeouts, you’ve already lost.
Must be proprietary, bc TOTP shouldn’t be blocked by age of the device
Good code is code that’s easy to delete.
I’m not a game dev, but it’s got a reputation for being more of a software engineering shit show than other software industries, which your story only reinforces.
What are the numbers for?
speed up certain types of applications as long as application providers don’t have to pay for special treatment
Maybe they mean by doing things like giving slight priority to real-time application traffic like VOIP over streaming over websites vs file transfers, like how home routers can?
Don’t think that should be something to charge people more for, though. They’re not even able to deliver on their own advertised speeds.
Fine for prototyping, but adds a scaling tech debt “time bomb” for a live system. Those associations had better be really sparse.
So… a polymorphic many-to-many join table?
If talking about a closed source app, their whole goal is to move off of hosting closed source systems.
Article says the decision follows a successful pilot project, so they’re willing to absorb the short term costs. Optimistically in the long run, the symbiotic benefits of having a government entity using and supporting a full FOSS system will be huge.
You can reference envs from the host in docker compose, so code it in instead of manually passing tribal knowledge in: https://stackoverflow.com/a/73826410