That’s a valid argument, but a very weak one. If we are not completely sure something is an improvement in all aspects are we just to dismiss it altogether?
That’s a valid argument, but a very weak one. If we are not completely sure something is an improvement in all aspects are we just to dismiss it altogether?
Maybe search for this on kaggle? Or scrape Wikipedia?
This is the major reason for me. I really liked yaml, because it is way more readable to me than JSON. But then I kept finding new and more confusing yaml features and have realized how over-engineered it is.
Yaml would be great language if it had its features prunned heavy.
They’ve lost potential revenue, but that is not the same as if amazon would come to their house and had stolen their only rucksack prototype.
Potential revenue is not your property.
It still sucks though.
It works great for a closed group of people, all on one instance. Another data point that federation is hard.
Oh, i have to try these out to see if it effects my development cycle. I do notice that cargo check is super fast, but cargo build takes a long time. So codegen and linker could be the source of slowness.
For a clean build: number of cores (because cargo builds each crate dependency in a separate process), for a build of your crate only: single core perf.
Can you expand on this wild claim? The whole point of containers is isolation so what you are saying is that containers fail at that all the time?
That’s cool, post a link here when you’re done, I want to see what you cook up.
Good, we have been in a drought of js frameworks lately: https://dayssincelastjsframework.com/
Joking aside, that’s your selling feature?
Why would you not be upgrading due to a new feature of python? You don’t like new features or was that a badly wordered sentence?
I use rathole for this purpose. Works great, minimal, great performance.
Everything outside of your home dir? This will prevent applications and logs and configuration to be backed up.
You can use ncdu cli to see which dirs take the most space.
Ok now I feel bad for being pedantic and to really helping:
flatpacks are installed ~/.local/share/flatpak
and /var/lib/flatpak
, depending on distro/flatpak installation I think. On my machine they are in ~/.local/share/flatpak
, but there are people reporting having them in /var/lib/flatpak
.
Source: https://www.reddit.com/r/flatpak/comments/f6uq3z/where_are_flatpaksflatpak_apps_installed/
Btw, I’d also exclude ~/.cache
(for obvious reasons) and everything out outside of /home
.
Please explain more! What happened?
Did you destroy a database? Expose credentials? Nuke the company intentionally?
Today, to configure fail2ban. Before that, yesterday to select which tests to run.
Sorry, I don’t know where flatpacks are installed (probably in /home/user/.local or /var/lib), but i want to nit-pick:
Its directories, not folders.
Well, lemmy is a place for much more cultured audience. We can appreciate a good shitpost (that does also hold some water).
That’s right. Let’s return to basics, to the first programming language we learn as developers: Pascal. Well at least I have, I assume everyone does too.
/s