Yeah, it’s accurate both ways
Man I wish OmniSharp didn’t suck. I built an extension with VSCode and got excited about what I could build, looked into OmniSharp again and gave up when it was crashing without me even throwing a big project at it.
This isn’t SQL specific, but a PR whose target is improving performance should measure the performance. It can be a lot of work, especially to get a representative dataset, but it will be worth it, then you can make tweaks to maximize performance, with numbers in hand. Who knows maybe this new design has a flaw and the performance is actually worse, maybe it’s better but it’s not worth the change. Right now you have no idea.
It’s blinking
Yeah in a PR I would probably reject this for being too clever. Before clicking I expected the image to start at 100mb or more, but it’s already under 50, who cares at this point?
The plane would keep moving while you left, so… you would come back in to empty space.
I use raindrop.io it’s very pretty and easy enough to use. On Android I can use the share menu to store articles making it easy to use on my phone too.
I don’t think that’s an acronym, it’s just an abbreviation
Except lots of email services won’t take a technically correct email anyway.
I only use it to clone projects via the Open in GitHub desktop link.
This is the way
Been using it for years it’s great
Oh you’re right, I’m not sure what I was Ln thinking
The errors are great https://api.isevenapi.xyz/api/iseven/1.5
~~Sadly it’s not always accurate https://api.isevenapi.xyz/api/iseven/0~~ Edit: nevermind I’m an idiot
It’s also greatly lacking in number support https://api.isevenapi.xyz/api/iseven/one
Totally agree, generated code shouldn’t be checked in 99% of the time. I’d check it in if it’s something like openApi spec file that’s generated and then everything else can use that spec file for generating clients and those don’t get checked in.
I mean it did change for a very good reason. Stuff gets hacked because everyone is online always. In “the good old days” it wasn’t a problem because people weren’t really online so there was pretty much zero risk of old software being used to exploit your machine. These days? It’s a liability to have old stuff on your phone because someone could exploit it to steal stuff from a large number of users.
That would probably be pretty hard, considering every service is different. Google drive stores your data and so their ToS probably says you can’t store pirated content, but that wouldn’t make sense for most other services that you can’t upload stuff to.
The number of times I move code around and can just press a hotkey to fix indentation though. Not possible with Python.