But their issue isn’t the old website. They’re complaining about the new version?
But their issue isn’t the old website. They’re complaining about the new version?
OP also felt the need to refer to the platform as Microsoft GitHub. So it seems likely this is all just grumbling about evil corp making changes
There seems to be a rando paragraph about AI as well,then it trails off that they’re looking for recommendations for git blame clients. I couldn’t really figure out how it was all GitHub’s fault or where the word legacy fits in.
I kinda got bored halfway through. From what I gather they’re salty that GitHub is switching to react? If that’s the issue then the headline is rather misleading isn’t it?
Surely legacy software is one that drifts into obscurity through lack of investment which is the polar opposite of GitHub rewriting their entire front end…
I actually quite like this idea.
You can take it a step further and use file extensions to determine the format. For example the parser would first search for title
, and if it doesn’t exist try title.md
title.html
etc and render the content appropriately.
When you finish the final sentence of an essay or a report do you just submit it straight away? You don’t read it through?
I don’t know about the specific question you ask but I’ve found Google OR Tools to be useful in the past: https://developers.google.com/optimization/pack/bin_packing
Blazor WebAssembly ticks the boxes that @treechicken@lemmy.world described.
I have this dream of a single WASM runtime environment across web, desktop, mobile with devs writing apps once, compiling them down to WASM, distributing them over the Internet, and users running them on any platform they like.
You write the app once and it can be compiled to WebAssembly that works across web, desktop, and mobile.
In reality to take full advantage of Blazor you’re probably going to use Blazor Server/hybrid for desktop and mobile but the principle is the same, you’ve only written your app once but it works in every environment.
I think you just described Blazor WebAssembly
You’re completely right. The deeper I get into bash the more absurd it is. Trying to iterate through text delimited by line breaks is ridiculously complex. And the sheer number of options for find and replace style operations is confusing sed, awk, printf, why?!
Oh I don’t think I made it clear enough. I know full well my opinion has no merit. I legit know nothing about Powershell, other than it has a uniquely blue background.
I despise powershell. But I have no actual reason for that opinion. … I’m just familiar with Bash so anything else looks like too much effort.
Is it really unreasonable to gain insight in to how their tooling is used? If it were being used to sell to advertisers I’d agree with you
That’s way too much text. It’s an interesting topic but I can’t imagine anyone is going to read that essay. Can’t it be condensed down to a few simple examples?
C#.
It’s a pleasure to work with, cross platform, superb documentation, great support and a robust ecosystem. The only complaint people ever seem to have is moaning about Microsoft.
Semi colons wouldn’t be valid in file names so they’re ignored so there’s no reason to include hyphens either
What do you like about ligatures? I disable them straight away. To me it just seems to add an unnecessary level of complexity to the experience
There is that one episode where they go into intense detail about how the Internet functions. They even show it!
The push for increased piracy is well-intended but for rightsholders it represents a major drawback too;
I assume they meant to write privacy there because I can’t imagine enhanced piracy was intended
Why not just give it away for free? It always seems odd to me that games just disappear rather than being allowed an elegant death of old age.