Type-safe lipstick :)
Type-safe lipstick :)
To offer a differing opinion, why is null helpful at all?
If you have data that may be empty, it’s better to explicitly represent that possibility with an Optional<T>
generic type. This makes the API more clear, and if implicit null isn’t allowed by the language, prevents someone from passing null where a value is expected.
Or if it’s uninitialized, the data can be stored as Partial<T>
, where all the fields are Optional<U>
. If the type system was nominal, it would ensure that the uninitialized or partially-initialized type can’t be accidentally used where T
is expected since Partial<T>
!= T
. When the object is finally ready, have a function to convert it from Partial<T>
into T
.
Op: Name and shame, please.
Yeah… I think you might be an optimist. It was not the positive outcome you appeared to have taken away from it.
The “++” in C++ stands for extra verbose.
I put “Messages will arrive in three to five business days” in my bio, and that solved the problem nicely. Now, I simply don’t get matches at all 😎
This assumes front-end development.
From a (dev)ops perspective, if I had a vendor hand me a tarball instead of proper documentation, I’d look very far away from their company. It isn’t a matter of if shit goes wrong, but when. And when that shit goes wrong, having comprehensive documentation about the architecture and configuration is going to be a lot more useful than having to piece it together yourself in the middle of an outage.
For your sake, I hope your employment was agile as well. Those jobs sound like they were dumpster fires waiting to happen.
This seems like common sense, no? Return 403 or better yet reject TCP connections on port 80 entirely.
That initial HTTP request header and body is sent in clear text, and that’s more than enough to leak credentials or other sensitive data.
That part comes when they find a publisher.
EGS? Oh, no. We don’t do that here. We’re more along the lines of:
It’s like scope creep, but where the demanding client is also your boss/coworker.
You think that’s bad? They have four of these “promo” dialogs to push users to the Reddit spyware app.
Fuck Spez.
Smoldering at best, sadly. It will take a lot more before Reddit goes and Digg V3’s itself.
Every bit counts at least.
ZZ
Edit: Has nobody actually tried doing this before downvoting? It saves and quits :/
“Add support for XYZ.”
No please, no thank you, just a follow-up of “is it done yet?” three days later.
To be fair to PDFs, they can contain JavaScript. Blame Adobe for that and their originally-exclusive-to-Acrobat extension for that.
They certainly tried with Secure Boot. Thank Stallman that UEFI is a somewhat-open architecture.