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Removed
Either ya understand why most women pick the 🐻 or you are the 🐻.
  • Good lord some of those are spot on.

    There's a lot of men telling on themselves in this thread. And everywhere else too.

  • Removed
    Either ya understand why most women pick the 🐻 or you are the 🐻.
  • ...but no one is making this racist except those trying to cause arguments, and those who don't understand what women are saying.

    Yes, if someone said something racist and meant it, they'd be a racist. Women are not doing that.

  • Removed
    Either ya understand why most women pick the 🐻 or you are the 🐻.
  • No, no, no. Don't you realize? Men are the real victims here! Eyeroll to end all eyerolls

  • Removed
    Either ya understand why most women pick the 🐻 or you are the 🐻.
  • if you're trolling, I think you're leaning too far into the stereotype.

  • Featured
    This community is now the official Lemmy of r/LinuxHardware! 🐧
  • Yeah it works great, just make sure the ram you buy is in their compatible list.

  • Global Wind Report 2024 - Record year for wind energy shows momentum but highlights need for policy-driven action - Global Wind Energy Council
  • Wind feels so much stronger than 20 years ago, at least in Michigan USA.

    I don't suppose anyone knows of a site that has wind speed plotted over time? I found a NASA site, but it's difficult to compare years.

  • action park rule
  • You both present sick arguments!

  • action park rule
  • Reference: The Dollop, a comedy history podcast with Dave Anthony and Gareth Reynolds. The episode is "Action Park".

  • action park rule
  • IM THE FUCKING HIPPO GUY

  • "No, seriously. All those things Google couldn't find anymore? Top of the search pile. Queries that generated pages of spam in Google results? Fucking pristine on Kagi – the right answers, over and ov
  • Just being able to exclude certain sites, and reduce the ranking of others, makes search so much better in Kagi.

    I hope they eat Google's lunch.

  • Every time
  • The Ian McKellen one is great too. "I'm not really a wizard, you know"

  • Every time
  • Picard tries to cover up, but it's too late, I've seen everything.

  • University of Texas at Austin Fires 60 Staff Focused on Diversity and Inclusion
  • First they came for the...

    And if there is anyone left in 100 years, they might ask "why did people let this happen?"

  • Apple says it spent three years trying to bring Apple Watch to Android - 9to5Mac
  • Well, you see, first off you need a microservice to distinguish between those 2 types of step, then you need separate microservices to handle storing those values. Then you need a GraphQL database in a multi zone Kubernetes cluster as a backend...

    Ugh I feel dirty saying all that.

  • Deleted
    *Permanently Deleted*
  • Damnit, I was going to post "yeah it's called Cunnington's Law" and see who fell for it.

  • Help needed with volume sensitivity

    My wife and I are both autistic. She has difficulty moderating the volume of her voice, and I'm volume sensitive. So far she's been unable to recognize when I'm having trouble, and I've been unable to stop being so sensitive. :/

    I've tried wearing earplugs but I have trouble remembering to keep them in.

    Does anyone have any suggestions on how to reduce volume from someone when you're sensitive and they're loud without realizing it?

    10
    Moog Cookbook - Hotel California

    Utterly wild and hilarious, today is a Moog kind of day.

    2
    [SOLVED] How to decide what to do with command line parameters?

    This is solved, I was being dumb. Please see second EDIT below

    This isn't really language specific, but if it helps I'm using Python. I can get the parameters just fine with the Traitlets module, but I'm still a novice really and figuring out which patterns to use is challenging.

    Say you have a bunch of command line parameters. Some are booleans, where their presence means True, absence means False. Other parameters must accept one text string, and others can be used multiple times to build a list of strings.

    It feels inefficient/wrong to use a bunch of IF/THEN/ELSE statements to decide what to do with the parameters, and prone to edge case errors. Is there a pattern that would invoke the correct method based on the combination of input parameters?

    Examples: ``` app thing --dry-run --create --name=newname01 --name=newname02 --verbose

    app thing --create --name=newname01 --name=newname02 --name=newname03

    app job --cancel -i 01 -i 02 -i 03 ```

    EDIT: Via the Traitlets module, I get those arguments parsed and accessible as self.argname, so getting them into my app is working great. It's just deciding what to do with them that is confusing me.

    Thank you, sorry for my noobness.

    EDIT2: I think I understand where I'm going wrong:

    I'm creating subcommands based on objects, not actions. i.e. appname thing --action should really be appname action --thing. Once things are divided up into actions, assigning things to those actions will be much, much easier and straightforward.

    Sorry for a confusing and fairly pointless post :(

    20
    After submitting a comment, edit window stats open

    When I submit a comment, the edit window stays open. I then get prompted to Stay or Leave the comment, even though it's already been submitted. Is there a way to disable that behaviour?

    8
    How do you make config data available to all classes?

    I am writing an object-oriented app to help our developers manage some cloud systems. I'd like to make the configuration information available to all the classes, but I'm not sure of a good way to do that. Everything I can think of seems to fall under the category of "global variables" which as far as I know is a Very Bad Thing.

    I already have a logging Mixin class that enables logging for every class that inherits it, and I was wondering if that's the right way to approach the configuration data: ```python class LoggingMixin: @classmethod @property def log(cls): return logging.getLogger(cls.name)

    class TestClassA(LoggingMixin): def testmethod1(self): self.log.debug("debug message from test class A")

    if name == "main": logging.basicConfig( format="{created:<f} {levelname:>5s} {name}.{funcName:>8s} |{message}|", level=logging.DEBUG, style="{", )

    a = TestClassA() a.testmethod1() Outputs (in case you are curious) 1688494741.449282 DEBUG TestClassA.testmethod1 |debug message from test class A| ```

    What's a good way of making data from a class available to all classes/objects? It wouldn't be static, it'd be combined from a JSON file and any command line parameters.

    If I copied the example above but changed it to a ConfigMixin, would that work? With the logging example, each class creates its own logger object when it first calls self.log.debug, so that might not work because each object needs to get the same config data.

    Is there a pattern or other design that could help? How do you make configuration data available to your whole app? Do you have a config object that can get/set values and saves to disk, etc?

    Thank you for reading, my apologies for poorly worded questions.

    28
    bloopernova bloopernova @programming.dev
    Posts 5
    Comments 915