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We will only care about it once the rich have divested from all the assets that will become worthless if we truly recognized the significance of what’s happening.
We will only care about it once the rich have divested from all the assets that will become worthless if we truly recognized the significance of what’s happening.
Not a European, but I’m going with dark alleys.
I think basic or even complex stuff is fine in vanilla js.
The problems show up as you scale the team and code base. You can do a large project in vanilla js but you’re going to have to solve a lot of the same problems frameworks/libraries have already solved. Maybe it’s worth it, maybe it’s not.
Does that mean we have teh codez to bypass the paywall?
I do microclouds in the service.
Destroy corporate healthcare by curing diabetes.
Yeah but it’s just going to get better at magicking. Soon all us wizards will be out of a job…
Not saying anything about good or bad, but trunk-based development doesn’t work when the business requires you to have multiple releases under development concurrently.
If the job market around you sucks then you may have to just practice until you get good enough.
However that does not mean online code tests are accurate or properly reflect your skills and ability to do actual job work. They’re a tool used by companies that don’t respect the candidate’s time and you should see that as a mini red flag.
Good one, I hope others can learn from my mistakes
SQL-99 called and wants it’s joke back
This should give corporations hope that they can still turn things around.
If the salary is right, you can call me whatever you want.
I think of XHR as more of a low-level API. Most of the time though you don’t need access to those low-level details.
The fetch API is bit higher level and nicer to work with.
Lol just try it yourself. Pound some white sugar and psyllium husks and see how you feel afterwards.
I would start with the classic: Don’t Make Me Think by Steve Krug
Dang, I was thinking companies using vaccines to put ads in our anuses, but you’re probably right.
If you look at your poop in the toilet, then yes they will put ads in your anus. The ads would of course come out with your turds.
I know of 2 projects that wanted to migrate from Oracle to Postgres, one of which was successful. Both migrations were driven by cost savings–Oracle can get exceedingly expensive.
In both cases there was up front analysis of Oracle specific features being used. A lot of that could be rewritten into standard SQL but some required code logic changes to compensate. Vendor lock-in is insidious and will show up in native queries, triggers, functions that use Oracle packages, etc.
Changing a project’s underlying database is rare, but not as rare as it used to be.
But how’s the java support? If it’s better than vs code then it might be worth something.