bennyp 1y ago • 87%
Why complain? Is construct glorious empire for mother Russia!
bennyp 1y ago • 100%
I love that for you
bennyp 1y ago • 93%
It will be annoying for a minute but this change is good: it will help developers ship extensions faster and with fewer bugs by using standard JavaScript modules and IDE support. As mentioned in the blog: modules were standardized in 2015! At what point does it become acceptable to drop non-standard features?
bennyp 1y ago • 100%
this
is very handy when you want to carry over some shared context. Justin Fagnani described this
as an implicit first argument, which is a model that helped me understand how to use it better.
bennyp 1y ago • 100%
The Right Honorable
bennyp 1y ago • 100%
Thanks for the shoutout!
bennyp 1y ago • 100%
How about a browser extention which replaces the debugger keyword in all downloaded js source with void 0
or something?
bennyp 1y ago • 100%
agreeing with krogoth - i use vscode via github's web editor and other such buffoonery, and since many of my teammates also use microsoft's loss-leader false-flag not-quite open-source community trojan editor, I have to stay reasonably current.
so i'm conversant, and use it, but i wouldn't "switch" in the sense of "adopt as my daily driver", for reasons which should be obvious from the last sentence ;)
bennyp 1y ago • 100%
lol if you think this is a "twitter" problem you're out to lunch
bennyp 1y ago • 100%
Growing pains? Red hat is 30 years old. The open source initiative was founded in 1998.
bennyp 1y ago • 100%
" already means something though (leader to pick a register)
Try the which-key plugin, and/or make up silly stories for your bindings e.g. "you surround a word "
bennyp 1y ago • 100%
It depends on what your expectations are and how you see your relationship to your editor (sorry for the cringe anthropomorphism)
If you want to tinker and think of tweaking your editor as a hobby, then sure dive in
If your config already works and you don't need the hassle, then don't
In between? Want to use a specific lua plugin but don't want to commit? You can do that too
bennyp 1y ago • 100%
I wonder what her opinion is on the Israeli judicial reform.
Actually on second thought I don't really care to know
bennyp 1y ago • 100%
Quote from svgo:
SVG Optimizer is a Node.js-based tool for optimizing SVG vector graphics files.
Why?
SVG files, especially those exported from various editors, usually contain a lot of redundant and useless information. This can include editor metadata, comments, hidden elements, default or non-optimal values and other stuff that can be safely removed or converted without affecting the SVG rendering result.
A quick-and-dirty plugin to optimize your svg files in nvim using `svgo`