Plus it has markers for variable types just like Esperanto has suffixes for parts of speech. Wall was a linguist, after all.
Plus it has markers for variable types just like Esperanto has suffixes for parts of speech. Wall was a linguist, after all.
Esperanto always struck me as more perl-like with each part of speech having its own suffix like perl has $ for scalars, @ for arrays, and % for hashes. Though perl is probably more like a bunch of pidgins…
Same reason it’s Japan, Germany, China, etc.
So no classes but lots of extra credit?
I’ve got a foldable to deal with being on call as a sysadmin and it’s so much better than lugging o laptop around. The more screen I can fit in my pocket, the better.
Production errors.
LGTM (lunatic gunner targeting me)
For a movie with this premise, may I recommend The Lobster
This is clearly Mad Bull and is ok for children to have after takoyaki.
Doink
My opinion of Texas was capable of being even worse after all.
You want an award? I hate working with JSON without a prettier.
A few weeks? How do you stay employed? How do you even feed yourself at that pace? Blocked on making a sandwich, I’ve got the wrong type of bread.
It’s three lines in an editor config file to standardize the indents across any editor: https://editorconfig.org/
In vscode, adding two extensions is all I need:, yamllint (if you don’t use linters, I don’t know how you do your job in any language) and rainbow indents. Atom had similar ones. I’m sure all IDEs are capable of these things. If you work at a place that forces you to use a specific editor and limits the way you can use it, that’s not YAML’s fault.
At a certain point, it’s your deficiencies that make a language difficult, not the language’s. Don’t blame your hammer when you haven’t heated the iron.
If it were an Atlus game, this would be dlc.
So it’s easy to enforce locally but you don’t have to. And it’s easy to see indentation on modern IDEs and you can even make your indents rainbows and collapse structures to make it easier to see what’s going on, but I guess since some people want to write it in vi without ALE or a barebones text editor, it’s bad? Like there are legit reasons it’s bad, and other people have mentioned them throughout the thread, but this seems like a pretty easy thing to deal with. I work with ansible a bunch and YAML rarely is where my problem is.
YAML mixes 2 and 4 spaces
I think that’s a user thing and it doesn’t happen if you have a linter enforce 2 or 4.
Once Rita Repulsa makes it the size of a building, that when the Megazords come out.
How else are you going to open your files in nano to do the programming on the prod server?