Why would the carrying capacity drop? The sourced article is full of unsourced prose http://www.paulchefurka.ca/CC_Overshoot.html
Sorry greenpeace, I’m an environmentalist myself, but this article is just a bunch of made up BS
Why would the carrying capacity drop? The sourced article is full of unsourced prose http://www.paulchefurka.ca/CC_Overshoot.html
Sorry greenpeace, I’m an environmentalist myself, but this article is just a bunch of made up BS
I once collaborated with an exceptionally talented programmer who seemed so engrossed in his addiction that he would invent challenges where there were none, presumably to make his work more engaging and bearable. However, this often led to incomplete projects because once the stimulating aspects were finished, he struggled to find the motivation to continue. Clearly, this behavior was extreme and detrimental.
I think a lot of devs can relate to that
While we’re at it, can we please define enums for the standard logging levels in the stdlib
Tbf forks should be separated in the repo view on GitHub from repos you’ve created
Is it though? Has someone tried with some of the past problems?
Who cares if the program has done its job anyway
This works a lot of the time with the people that don’t really care about the review. With those that do it won’t
Focusing beyond the code - as a developer you will code 20% of your time.
Doesn’t sound like a great software engineer to me
In my company everyone is called Software Development Engineer 🤷♂️
If you can do it in 2-3 months it’s worth it, else you’re probably not getting paid enough
Basically, they won’t bother sueing you unless you end up making millions off it
But at that point the program will likely not even be reminiscent of its original form
Yeah, let’s not. This is not a good idea
started up notepad, which was the only application it was capable of running
Coding a linked list in C in Notepad and only one syntax error? This guy’s worth the money!
Even less so now that docstrings can be mostly written by AI
whoosh
Sounds like a great DRY culture to me
Industrial workers in the 20th century probably never imagined being replaced by robots, but it’s happened on a large scale.
There’s still plenty of industrial workers. The same will be true for programmers as AI proliferates.
These jobs don’t go away, they just become more specialized
But I will agree with the general notion that we as programmers are incredible fortunate to be able to work from anywhere, creatively, without physical labor
These features are part of 3.11, not 3.11.7 🤦♂️