Why?
Why?
He had an interview with Google and they asked him to invert a binary tree, which is essentially taking a tree of data and swapping the positions of all sibling nodes.
While most people agreed it was a pretty pointless question to ask at an interview, mxcl had a full “don’t you know who I am” shit fit on social media.
If anyone hasn’t made the connection, mxcl is the infamous Google interview binary tree guy
FWIW, those PEI sheets usually need higher bed temp than the regular sheets
nothing purrsonal kit
I googled “how to migrate from esxi to proxmox” last week. I must be psychic.
It depends on your intent. If you’re doing it to keep history clean and linear in the long term, it’s a huge waste of time as it gets splatted into a single squashed merge commit. It also makes it difficult for reviewers to rereview your changes as GitHub/Lab can’t calculate the diff because you keep moving the goalposts with force pushes.
If you’re doing it for cleanliness on your local branch then I guess that’s fine, but I find it anti-social in a multi participant repo.
Agreed. I’ve been trying to explain to someone recently why rebasing and force pushing their feature branch has no benefit when we use a squash commit strategy for merging to main.
Again, tools are not blame, but when combined with a lack of understanding and accumulated “git dogma”, it can be quite disheartening.
Same. I mostly use sourcetree to do quick self-reviews and to discard lines or hunks before a commit.
But I’ve also grown very weary of having to dig people out of git messes they’ve made with sourcetree and the likes.
Visual clients aren’t to blame for that, but they contribute. So many times I’ve asked “and what git commands did that run?” only to receive a dumb stare as a reply.
I think it’s exactly that. They are targeted at bootstrapping projects and prototyping and are, frankly, very good at that job.
Not sure on your use case, but I’ve been using Hetzner for a while and it does what it says on the tin.
That sounds hard and discord already has my retinal scans
I just wanna chat over the internet using some sort of relay. If only there were a solution.
Yes you’re correct, this was the point I was making.
To elaborate: could be 100s of times in a codebase, even 1000s, being executed in tests on local machines and build servers 100s of times a day, etc. etc.
rand will be called every time true is used, which could be hundreds of times for all we know
Files have formats. Anything “hidden” here is destroyed by conversion to a different font format before redistribution.
There is no way of controlling this from the authors side without some sort of DRM.
Isn’t this easily bypassed by modifying the “hidden” part
You win
It creates an ssh tunnel and then sends the file over http, so … literally no advantage to using this over ssh/scp.
Worse in every way, actually.
Replying again to say: that actually makes sense. You should have said that upfront! Suddenly being locked out of critical software is definitely a risk worth considering