It’s a list with a tuple, with a list with an empty dictionary. I’m not sure the innermost parenthesis is legal there.
Edit: Well, I tested it. It’s legal. {()}
is just a set with an empty tuple instead of a dictionary.
It’s a list with a tuple, with a list with an empty dictionary. I’m not sure the innermost parenthesis is legal there.
Edit: Well, I tested it. It’s legal. {()}
is just a set with an empty tuple instead of a dictionary.
“Rotting” is a state that won’t last past the middle 30s. By 2056 they’ll be fully decomposed.
It has been in exponential growth since the signal was distinguishable from the noise, and exponentials do not have inflection points…
The only inflection we can expect is when it reaches 1/4 of saturation.
That’s a remarkable coincidence!
Anyway, yes, it’s not disallowed or impossible.
If you are trying to seriously understand how to do it… well, you can’t. Current AIs can’t fully replace anybody, and it’s an open question if they can partially replace (AKA improve the productivity) anybody to any impactful extent.
Do your scrum-using organization put users at the development process?!? I don’t think I’ve seen any Agile¹ organization doing that.
1 - The one with capital “A”, that is an antonym of the one with lower cap “a”.
Companies will save so much money once they decide to replace their CEOs with AIs…
I don’t see a way out
Free software exists. And if you have any power over a non-small organization, it’s also something you can help improve to fit your needs.
I don’t think “easier” is the right way to compare here. The C++ build tools will absolutely rewrite your code into something you can’t expect to guess, but it doesn’t make them hard to “use”.
It’s not even the coercion that is the problem here. The types are already bad by themselves.
SVG? SVG isn’t half a language, it’s a completely functional one!
There’s an ecosystem of entire instances with crazy rules.
The fact that Lemmy just doesn’t become unusable with all this brokerage tells a lot about the benefits of a distributed system.
It’s a much larger problem when there are several different cables.
The year Linux takes over the desktops!
I fell like the reason nobody uses FileZila and etc anymore is because everybody that wanted it migrated to Linux already. So seriously, it already happened.
Tony Lazuto says you should delete System32
No, sorry. It’s backwards compatible on address length too.
What is the objectively correct answer. I have no idea why people keep asking that question.
Ok, now I’m fully proposing a new standard, called IPv16! (Keeping with the tradition to jump over numbers.)
Also, it will be fully backwards compatible for a change! That solves the largest complaint from the holdouts!
I have plenty of coworkers that are thrilled when we have an in-office event. And some that choose to go there to work every day.
I can’t understand them, but well, it makes them happy.
The goal of a system is what it does. That’s true for communities too.
Lemmy isn’t much of a link aggregator. It’s more more a discussion platform. But it’s open for specializing some part of it, what is really great.