Biden gets a rousing tribute from Democrats as he passes
I knew he was sick, but holy crap.
the torch to Harris in 2024 DNC speech
Oh, phew
Biden gets a rousing tribute from Democrats as he passes
I knew he was sick, but holy crap.
the torch to Harris in 2024 DNC speech
Oh, phew
I'm not sure I see the issue. Is there something wrong with them reporting on Ukraine's Kursk region? Doesn't seem like an illegal border crossing to me.
Two can play at this game.
Their GPUs are already bricks. Just throw the GPUs.
Two thoughts come to mind for me:
Would it work to write the query as a common table expression, then select your columns from that table and join it with a count(*)
aggregation of the table?
Or look at Python and their urllib, urllib2, new urllib, and the requests package on PyPi.
We already sort of saw this in Rust with crossbeam and standard channels, until of course they replaced the standard lib implementation with crossbeam's implementation.
Hey look, the classic "America bad" comment on a post critical of China!
Are these people bots or something? It's possible to be critical of both at different times.
I think it's good to document why things are done, but extracting things out into another function is just documenting what is being done with extra steps. This also comes with a number of problems:
//
or #
would have made the code just as readable.If those functions are huge units of work or pretty complex, I can agree. For most cases though, a simple code comment should do to explain what's going on?
My friend's homophobic dad was diagnosed with HIV right before his wife filed for divorce. They had a long discussion about how he got it, and he admitted to it being another guy. She was very lucky not to have HIV as well.
There does exist a correlation, but like all generalizations, it does not apply to all cases and can come off dismissive, rude, or minimizing when it isn't actually true. I find that it's best to avoid sweeping generalizations for people at all.
I think accessibility is widely misunderstood. The way I view it, it's not only about giving people who need them more ways to access something, but also giving people who want/prefer them those methods as well.
One example of this is wheelchair ramps. Building the ramps benefits those who need them by giving those people a way to go up/down an incline, but many people use the ramps. The ramps are also for those who would prefer to avoid the stairs.
Digital tools are another example of this, and a great one. Keyboard accessibility is a must for people with visual impairments, but also a preference for many who prefer not to move their hand to the mouse constantly. Keyboard-accessible tools are almost always a better experience to all users as a result.
Not building for accessibility is honestly just lazy. It shows that you don't care about your customers, and you don't want them to have a good experience. At best, you want to force your experience on them and only your experience is allowed (my biggest gripe with Apple products honestly).
As for digital art, I've seen a lot of what you mentioned, and I think it's honestly been going on for centuries at this point. It's problematic, especially because not everyone wants to create art in the One True Manner(TM) and may want to experiment with new ways to create art, or may want the art as a part of a larger project and don't really care about the means (as long as it's ethical).
Pushing HTML even further, one could say it's a declarative programming language that programs a UI in a mostly-stateless manner (inputs aren't really stateless but you can argue the state is provided by the UI rather than managed by HTML).
I'm not sure I'd make this leap myself though, I have a hard time classifying it (or any other markup language) as a PL. As far as I am aware, you can't really program a state machine with pure HTML, though you can accept inputs and return outputs at least.