I literally just watched the video from Louis Rossman, and came straight here. Pleased to see everyone already talking about it!
I literally just watched the video from Louis Rossman, and came straight here. Pleased to see everyone already talking about it!
I actually vastly prefer this behavior. It allows me to jump to (readable) source in library code easily in my editor, as well as experiment with different package versions without having to redownload, and (sort of) work offline too. I guess, I don’t really know what it would do otherwise. I think Rust requires you to have the complete library source code for everything you’re using regardless.
I suppose it could act like NPM, and keep a separate copy of every library for every single project on my system, but that’s even less efficient. Yes, I think NPM only downloads the “built” files (if the package uses a build system & is properly configured), but it’s still just minified JS source code most of the time.
Nah bro they just all cheap asf
me and my zero friends who use it
I honestly can’t say I’ve noticed much of a quality difference, so it doesn’t seem like a huge value add. I might just be oblivious though.
Currently trying out Kagi, still on the fence. Boy am I blowing through the trial searches though.
Credit card info -> see timestamped transit transacting history, including station name (location)
Hanlon’s razor, but with coincidence instead of stupidity.
I think you can probably make the question a lot more interesting by asking them to implement max without using any branching syntax. I’m not saying that is necessarily a good interview question, but it is certainly more interesting. That might also be where some of the more esoteric answers are coming from.