got it; arse
It would certainly be an issue if you didn’t have one
got it; arse
It would certainly be an issue if you didn’t have one
The problem was named after an incident in 1996 in which AOL’s profanity filter prevented residents of the town of Scunthorpe, North Lincolnshire, England, from creating accounts with AOL, because the town’s name contains the substring “cunt”.
haha
those are terms, this is substrings within words
I haven’t seen branches or variables being called arse
Then again, I do like to catch exceptions as up
so I can throw up
Simple changes require only simple reviews.
Responsibility is shared. It’s not one or the other.
Many people don’t know what they’re doing. That’s kind of expected. But a tool provider and seller should know what they’re doing. Enabling people to behave in a negative way should be questioned. Maybe it’s a consequence of enablement, or maybe it’s bad design or marketing. Where criticism is certainly warranted.
Commit with Co-authored-by: Copilot
or maybe better --author=Copilot
It would certainly help evaluate submissions to have that context
oh, that’s a cool website
adds it to bookmarks and search bookmarks
But did it reach test or production environment yet? Or will it die in development environment.
Even C# has something that few people use, but it has something.
Huh? Are you claiming few people use NuGet?
Formatted, so I can read it
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NullPointerException:
Cannot invoke "String.toLowerCase()" because the return value of
"com.baeldung.java14.npe.HelpfulNullPointerException$PersonalDetails.getEmailAddress()" is null
at com.baeldung.java14.npe.HelpfulNullPointerException.main(HelpfulNullPointerException.java:10)
I think using display: grid;
as your default is the better default, so you’re all set. :)
It baffles me when people use flex layout when it’s clearly visually a grid layout. Nothing here is flexing with varying element sizes and auto-fill-wrap-break of items.
A colleague of mine prefers flex too. But to me, grid is so much more intuitive and simple.
https://css-tricks.com/quick-whats-the-difference-between-flexbox-and-grid/
For me that’s the wrong way around.
I want to be able to fix the issues I see. I hate it when I can’t.
I’m thankful I am full stack and can do my stuff across borders. I hate the interfaces, waiting for stuff, or being hindered by dissatisfactory (to me anyway) stuff from them. So I’m glad when I have control over the entire stack - from talking to the customer to running production.
Anything I don’t have control over - most if it doesn’t get done, the rest can be okay or bothersome.
I hate that I don’t see what the admin set up and does on the infrastructure. It makes it harder to assess issues and potential issues and how they could correlate with infrastructure changes and activities…
so you put up a front?
I’ve tried out Linear (only peeked into it) and it’s the perfect contrast of performance against Jira.
I feel like Jira is not enabling me to use Jira either.
The UI and UX is shit. Performance is shit. It’s not only about configuration.
Jira Server is the on-premise Jira, right?
We had to change to Jira Cloud. (Vendor lock-in, mainly because of time-tracking appendix tools of that.) It’s horrendeous. UI and UX is horrendeous. The DOM is horrendeous. Performance is horrendeous.
My CSS Hacks to fix the UI to a degree I can reasonably work with it are a lot more work now with the generated DOM class and ids. Sometimes they at least have test IDs which can be used.
Some things, like the board component quick filter, are not even available anymore.
The interactivity functionality is irritating and annoying most of the time.
The browser extension we use further fucking up doesn’t help either of course.
Don’t even get me started on Confluence. Which can’t even find pages when I type the exact page title, or ranks them low. And editing tables is a hassle beyond belief now that responsive tables (self-sizing) are gone. It’s wasteful on space too of course, with huge spacing.
That’s a lot of dollars, ching ching ching