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Me too! I am not a professional but audio support is such a point of friction for me that I’d love to see how others handle it when it’s critical to their work.
There’s already some good advice here, especially about virtual environments which might be the most important new concept to learn IMO. But just to let you know - it’s not just you. The most generous view of the Python package situation is that there are a lot of different ways to do it.
Bile goes viral can stay, the rest of you get outta here.
It depends on what sort of collaboration. For things on which I was the sole author, like my dissertation, I leveraged the miracle that is pandoc. Every email my advisor got from me was a perfectly formatted Word doc with a flawless bibliography and he never had to learn what the hell LaTeX is.
But if you have multiple contributors going back and forth, or need to keep long-lived discussions in the track changes panel, you’re better off not trying to teach others a new tool. Unless they have a genuine interest in it, in which case the WYSIWYG editors can be fun.
a stable experience that isn’t buggy
Stable has a particular meaning with distros but I think the context here is using the plain English definition of the word.
I once spent a few days sketching out what sort of video game I would make, if I ever did. More as an exercise for myself (a developer nowhere near the game industry) rather than an actual plan. At the end of it, I had a sci fi setting with a handful of roguelike and deckbuilder elements. Shortly after, I discovered Breachway, and it felt like someone had been reading my mind. I love that they have a proper demo, and now I’m really excited to see the game approach its release!
The README lacks a description of why I would choose this over rm
. The name makes me think it might replace shred
but that doesn’t appear to be the case.
I hate seeing data encoded into magic comments, struct tags included. One of my biggest gripes with Go is that I think they should have used a different symbol to distinguish important annotations from true comments.
This is probably the worst example to choose, because in the US the generic name is acetaminophen. This is a case where the brand name actually unites understanding of a drug whose chemical name differs by location.
That being said, I still agree with the spirit, let’s stick to referring to the drug and not the brand.
Rust: “Oh honey you aren’t ready to compile that yet”
“That sign can’t stop me because I can’t read!”
Looks cool! But FYI this site is fucked on mobile (at least iOS), there’s a giant lemmy logo/link that blocks the form fields.
I always thought it was weird to model a game avatar after myself. I always roll the “random character” button (shout-out Monster Factory) when it’s available, keeps things simple.
Trine 2! It’s a side-scrolling action/puzzle platformer, and a rare game actually made for 3.
As someone returning to make simple web UIs after a long stint in backend, and not wanting to learn a heavy JS framework, this is massively useful. CSS has gotten a lot of new tricks since I last checked!
In applications where I’ve needed this, I’ve taken a manual approach. Structure the function to return a single Result struct (including an error field), develop a convention for mapping function inputs to a string, then add reads & writes to a map[string]*Result
which allows me to return cached values as a shortcut. No idea if it’s the most efficient way, I’ve not actually considered finding a package to handle the process.
Edit: For more advanced behavior, what are your thoughts on the official memoize package?
So, only about a decade until reaching feature parity with something like lazygit?
The K5 has been in some sticky situations in other cities. One was toppled and slathered in barbecue sauce in San Francisco…
I don’t know why but this is just a hilarious failure state for a giant robot.
My go to for most of what you mention is Go, but that’s obviously a compiled language and not for scripting. Or is it - What do you think about https://github.com/traefik/yaegi, which provides an interpreter and REPL for Go? It would let you use a performant and well documented language in a more portable scripting way, but not preclude you from generating statically linked binaries if and when that’s convenient.