Before studying programming, I used to work as electrician, haha
Django backend developer.
Also likes anime, sci-fi, beer and mexican food, and not always talk about himself using the third person form.
Before studying programming, I used to work as electrician, haha
I’ve been software developer for +7 years, and I must say I also love woodworking. Since is something completely out of my scope as developer, it requires patient and is pretty relaxing working with your hands like this. No client changes, no meetings, instant feedback… and no dependency managers.
Because it was.
Pulsar seems more like an Atom continuation made by community. Which is really cool.
I was wondering what could happened with Atom. Nice to see it died to reincarnate into a powerful IDE.
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There is several ways to post your docs without wasting money, in a far better way, like using ReadTheDocs or just generating it with whatever library made for your project’s language, like Pydoc, and serving it from GitHub Pages.
It’s not even complicated, I don’t know why keep making it complex…
Never heard about projects using Discord for docs (sounds terrible and useless, tbh), but now I’m afraid of it.
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lmao-lang is ok as we like esoteric langs, but gosh, uncrossing lines are being crossed.
Donations to free software projects are pretty important. Since most of big ones are maintained by companies which has a partnership with foundations, lot of most free software projects (libraries, components, apps, etc) are maintained by small amount of volunteers, who paid everything for the project.
So, this not mean to make you rich, but at least having a coffee paid by some Lemmy user who uses your piece of software and wants to be grateful, makes you a bit more happy.
That’s how Poetry works. I guess all modern ones work like this.
Interesting and quite awesome. Hope it can grow enough to be mature soon and I can start using this instead of Poetry.
Classic XKCD. I’d pay for a Die Hard version like this.
Already explained, I made this with SankeyMATIC and made a missed the count. 9 1st Interviews, not 10.
49+3+9 is 61 :D
Makes sense.
In the end I found something which I really like. But the search was painful, due to the bug amount of no responses. Not even a call to ask me about my background, or an email saying they’re going to move forward with other candidate…
Some Spanish newspapers and blogs are blaming “the remote work trending” for this, and claiming 97% of companies can’t find good candidates. Well, maybe this is because they’re looking for devs who waste their time into going to the office, because productivity, when there is studies which say working from home has even better results.
As I said, this is my experience in Spain, not US.
The old look was pretty cool, but maybe because I’m used to it. New one feels better since looks modern and not stuck in 2010s anymore.
Kudos GNOME’s design team!