This is like Dalinar and the fighting master from Stormlight Archive.
This is like Dalinar and the fighting master from Stormlight Archive.
That’s why you set the alternate/exit cases as individual if statements before whatever was going to be inside the original if block.
To me too long to learn that.
If it’s not available as an Azure service it won’t be used (except for uptime kuma).
What Clive Barker movie do you live in?
Yeah. Commits going right to prod makes my skin crawl.
Took me a while to track it down, but I think this is the book to which you were referring.
https://angryflower.com/348.html
I make no cleans about the stances of this artist; I just saw this strip years ago.
Time for testing then 😊
Is there an option for being Evil Overlord List compliant?
Let’s not put Descartes before the horse.
Ohhh, that touched a deep well of hatred. My first engineering job was full stack and we had a highly modified Bootstrap front end. I’d build the thing they wanted, and the designers would get looped in for QA and insist that various pieces had to look like their little wireframe down to the pixel. I mean look, it’s easy right?
I asked why they are insisting on constantly going against the standards that had been adopted company-wide. Did it stop? Why no! Did I get a suit down with my boss? Why yes!
He is/was a cool guy and saw my perspective but also gave me precious advice on how to survive.
Also uses ableist language.
Here’s one: Trading cards are something you own. Skins are limited to a game you’re licensing.
Here’s another: trading cards are portable; they can be put in a collection for display, put in a safety deposit box, etc. When CS goes, all the skins go with it.
Another minor one: baseball cards are informational, the skins are cosmetic only.
Mind you, I think both are forms of unregulated gambling and trading cards as well as loot boxes should have better societal scrutiny, but they aren’t identical.
Edited for typo
I experienced this and still get PTSD flashbacks 😢
This screams Dresden Files.
You can set up a global exception handler in some frameworks. By having multiple (not a crazy amount) of exceptions, you can set up logic for how to handle that kind of error. Then you can just throw the exception instead of writing individual catch blocks.
This is especially helpful in things like a REST API where user input can cause all kinds of fun, let alone network issues, problems with your data source, etc.