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I actually implemented super tic tac toe in Blazor a while ago. It’s interesting to play.
I actually implemented super tic tac toe in Blazor a while ago. It’s interesting to play.
Why do I not win with a row on the outer field?
It counts won fields instead?
Krita doesn’t have an Android app version though, does it?
The link offers a download instead of serving an HTML? I’m on mobile Firefox (I doubt it matters).
I don’t think it should be a client feature. It should be federated, like the posts are.
I feel like cross-posts should share comment threads…
Now comment threads are split across 6 communities.
I can’t get what it describes through all the Jedi stuff and jokes.
One mentor and one apprentice? And everything else remains unspecified and open?
For FOSS, as it is described, it makes me think it’s a big investment with unclear risk (will they even stay as a contributor?). Which of course can be contextualized - but then what is left here?
I sometimes do things (cleanup, refacs) off-ticket / not part of the ticket. It can be a light alternative when other stuff is complicated and demotivating. Depending on your environment and team/contract setup, simply doing it could be more difficult though.
If it serves your satisfaction and productivity, and is good for the product, then it’s not wasted. Not everything has to be - or even can be - preplanned.
Or Modified Viable/Valuable Product
I don’t have experience with that in particular. I’ll share my more general, tangential thoughts.
MVP is minimal. Extending the scope like that makes me very skeptical (towards scoping and the processes).
Everything you are concerned with would be important topics for retrospectives, or even meetings with management. But of course those don’t exist or are open in all environments. In my team I could openly raise such concerns.
If you’re always rushing to a deadline, or feel like that, think of what you can do and influence to improve that. Retrospectives? Team disuscussions? Partly tuning out of management given focus and doing what you deem important and right? Look for a different team or employer?
Remember, when we do that, we are getting a binary file. But in my imaginary example, we are getting a ‘video description’ in form of PostScript.
The example is a reference/link with handling instructions.
When I think of video metadata, we already have and use formats for that, in a more general and versatile manner.
Maybe I’m missing the point, but sending instructions is a very different and restricted approach.
I like that we describe data and how it shall render. That way, the data is accessible for various interpretations and uses.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Altman#Other_endeavors
Another CEO resigned, and he took over (for eight days).
Where’s the source?
The post link is to the general website, with no indication.
The linked dotnet.social account describes itself with
Bot parrot for https://devblogs.microsoft.com/
If you like to bring #Microsoft #DevBlogs officially to the #Fediverse,
So I have to take away that it’s not federated after all. There’s only a bot sharing links.
Federated would mean more than a bot, right?
The title question is very broad, varied, and difficult. It depends.
For anything that is not a small script or small, obvious and obviously scoped takes, you can’t assess at first glance.
So for a project/task/extension like you wrote it’s a matter of:
Is there docs or guide specifically for what I want to do/add? If yes, the expectation is it is viable and reasonably doable with low risk.
If there is no guide the assessment is already an exploration and analysis. How is the project structured, is there docs for it or my concerns, where do I expect it as to go and what does it have to touch, what’s the risks of issues and unknown difficulties and efforts. The next step would already be prototyping, and then implementing. Both of which can be started with a “let’s see” and timebox approach where you remain mindful of when known or invested effort or risk increases and you can stop or rethink.
Regarding visual client: I’ve been using TortoiseGit since early on and no other client I’ve tried came close.
I use the log view and have an overview, and an entry point to all common operations I need. Other tools often fail on good overview, blaming through earlier revisions, filterable views of commits or files, or interactive rebase.
I’ve never found pressing modifier keys to be an issue. I’ll be mindful of my use today.
I guess the hold to repeat input (of letters) is not used much, so not a significant or noticeable loss when replaced. I’d certainly see false positives and having to type slower as deal breakers.
If you’re looking for collaboration or audience I’d stay with github. It’s too prevalent to skip for alternative niche with account signup and that elsewhere as a barrier.
If that’s no concern to you it’s viable.
it’s not yet the suggested version. Meaning that brave users need to install this manually for now
not production-/stable-live yet
You copied that function without understanding why it does what it does, and as a result your code IS GARBAGE.
AGAIN.
[…]
Debate continued for some time, in a cooler tone, with Torvalds offering suggestions on what he felt would be a better approach to the issues Rostedt hoped to address.
Harsh tone (in only two instances?), but he still invested in offering suggestions 🤷
I expected more behind the verb “flaming”.
It is.
Blazor is a big framework. It gives you a lot, but as a framework, also introduces stack complexity.
Being able to code on one C# codebase for a web application client and server is great. It’s very fast. You can use modern C# syntax. You have component (CSS) isolation. You can switch and mix between runtime targets (server dom rendering and sending diff-updates or client-side app execution).
At work, we’re using it for a webportal/webapp and I have not fundamentally regretted us using it. It’s definitely not worse than anything else. For a productive development and product there’s a little bit of framework knowledge you have to learn, but that’s not different than any other framework. And docs are very good.
I love how fast it feels to use the end product too.