A couple of times I’ve had it autocorrect to complete gibberish. Go home, GBoard, you’re drunk.
A couple of times I’ve had it autocorrect to complete gibberish. Go home, GBoard, you’re drunk.
Fish shell does this automatically. It’s one of the reasons I love it. You can auto-complete based on your command history.
Your instinct is wrong. If you want them to stop, you have to tell them to stop.
Yes, they will add you to other phone lists, but I think they’ll do that whether you text STOP or not. Also, it takes like 5 seconds.
Context?
It was under a YouTube video where it was just the song and a cover picture.
Why would anyone think this band was “AI”?
That’s exactly my point.
It’s “thrash”, not “trash”.
It was 10 days, but, yeah, not a lot of time, especially for one guy. (That one guy was Brendan Eich, by the way.)
There is absolutely nothing I do in an IDE frequently enough to memorize a bunch of arcane commands, especially in 3 days. Regex solves any mass-operations.
Yeah, don’t memorize a bunch of arcane commands. Use regex instead!
I refuse to see how vim and emacs is worth learning.
Interesting choice of words. You aren’t unable to see…you refuse to. Why would you refuse knowledge?
This happens much more often than the other one.
I always think about stuff like this whenever libertarians talk about how much more efficient corporations are than government. I’m like, “Have you ever worked for a corporation?” Organizations are just huge dumpster fires in general, because they’re all run by humans.
That should be elementary computer literacy: if you don’t know what the file does, then don’t delete it.
I knew somebody would have the relevant xkcd.
Naw, they wanted the metaphorical length. Computers are great at metaphors.
Is that actually a burn? It depends on the context.
It’s the same thing whenever I hear somebody say “I wish I could draw like that.” You probably can, but it would take hundreds of hours of practice. Of course, people wish that there was some shortcut, so that they could get the skill without all the work.
What you say?
I like the git katas which go along with Johan Abildskov’s book Practical Git. I recommend the book, but you don’t need it in order to do the katas.
Git isn’t properly taught. I’ve studied programming both in college and in a boot camp, and both times they rushed right over git, showing only the bare essentials. This left me unprepared for the real world. I didn’t know how to do basic stuff like exclude files or even undo changes.
It’s so complex, they really should have a separate class for it.
Or maybe…hear me out…different people like different things. Some people don’t like GUIs and enjoy working in the command line. For some other people, it’s the opposite.
It’s just different preferences.