@Rhywden said in Shit recruiters say:
@Carnage Why have only one horn when you can have two?
A twonicorn?
@Rhywden said in Shit recruiters say:
@Carnage Why have only one horn when you can have two?
A twonicorn?
Henry's celebrity lookalike is Johnny Depp.
I needed this for a work conversation and was very pleased with the results. Particularly the left middle image.
@topspin said in In other news today...:
@HardwareGeek said in In other news today...:
@remi said in In other news today...:
I've heard of vegans who object to eating stuff that was pollinated by animals! At that point I'm not even sure what they can eat. So obviously everyone will find their own point of comfort between what they believe (animal suffering etc.) and what they need (eat!).
I'm perfectly happy to let them find their own point of discomfort because they're morally unable to eat anything.
How about other vegans?
Eating the meat eaters would be the better long term strategy to reduce animal suffering.
@BernieTheBernie said in WTF Bites:
Brexit allows the Brexiteers to apply lower standards than the modern world.
Also this idiocy:
BBC News - Imperial measurement review to mark Jubilee
@boomzilla It's only a shame it wasn't 6.5 dozen because then you would have bought a baker's dozen of half-dozens.
@boomzilla said in In other news today...:
7.5 dozen
Since when do we express numbers in decimal amounts of dozens?
@JBert Not gonna lie, I kind of want an NFTea.
@Arantor dkf is referring to semantic versioning version 1.0.1
So the NPM semver package has just released a new patch version going from 7.3.5 to 7.3.6.
In the new release they've changed their engines definition from ">=10" to "^10.0.0 || ^12.0.0 || ^14.0.0 || >=16.0.0", explicitly removing support for the non-LTS versions of node.
Additionally they bumped their only dependency — lru-cache — from "^6.0.0" to "^7.4.0". Version 7 doesn't support node 10, so they've unintentionally removed support for that too even though they claim to support it in the engines definition.
The irony of the semver package breaking BC this badly in a patch release is just too delicious not to share.
The code change: https://github.com/npm/node-semver/compare/v7.3.5...v7.3.6#diff-7ae45ad102eab3b6d7e7896acd08c427a9b25b346470d7bc6507b6481575d519R47
Related issue: https://github.com/npm/node-semver/issues/447
@HardwareGeek said in Yahtzee:
@kazitor Perl?
I once wrote a GUI program in Perl and Tk. AFAIK, it's still sitting somewhere on SourceForge, mostly finished.
Filed under: Programming Confessions thread is
That's disgusting.
@pie_flavor I just got a 500 response when trying to roll. What's going on please?
@pie_flavor I hope you at least used a language that's as hipster as Elm.
@anotherusername yeah, it stores game history in local storage and current game state in session storage.
@Zecc ah, I think I see the problem. Are you a golfer by any chance?
@Zecc is beating everyone on published sum total of scores though.
@Parody Any reason not to do all that client side?
On a related note, the client currently persists game history into local storage. It stores enough to repopulate the scoreboard, but it's only used to calculate the summary view at the moment.
@pie_flavor I think it would be tricky to verify anything coming from the client unfortunately. I'm open to specific ideas on how it could work though.
I'm also open to thoughts on how the game could be extended.
@Tsaukpaetra noice. You did way better than that no-bonus @Zecc guy up there.
@kazitor High 200s is a good score if you don't score any Yahtzees.
@e4tmyl33t Yep, the rules that I followed said 100 bonus points for each extra Yahtzee. There are details in the help info for the Yahtzee score slot.
@izzion Yep, the upper bonus is there. Tap one of the upper section score names for details. I think it's a complete implementation.
So I was experimenting with Elm and I ended up making a mobile friendly version of Yahtzee:
If you've not played it before, the aim is to fill the scoreboard with the best overall score you can get. Each turn you get three rolls and you can lock and unlock dice after each roll.
You can click a score slot name for details about how each score works and bonuses. When you choose a score for the turn, a little undo button appears next to it (in case you tapped the wrong slot).
There's a link to the hub of gits in the menu.
Enjoy!
@Luhmann said in The Question is What Is The Question?:
What is going on with this thread? Shouldn't it be dead?
Why do you hate inquisitiveness?
@Tsaukpaetra said in The Question is What Is The Question?:
@Keith OMG is that a Kieth?
Does it walk like a Keith, swim like a Keith and quack like a Keith?
Why have there been no questions here in 2019?
Holy shit Amazon. That's quite the agenda you're pushing...
I don't know, but I can confirm that the same example is on the registration page.
Having never used rust, I choose to defend Go with religious zeal. Go is better.
Have you been hindered by the fact that the topic title originally contained the relevant information, but has since been changed?
Are your internal projects set up so go get works on them?
Not yet, but that's likely in the pipeline. Were keeping each codebase very separate at the moment to reduce the dependency issues we've had with other languages in the past.
I don't know how invested you are in your current languages, but consider Golang for writing microservices with strong inbuilt support for concurrency. We're moving to it for our backend APIs and we've been very impressed so far.
I've had three begging emails in the last month after donating £5 last year. I've basically paid to receive extra spam email. Never again.