@SportsGoblin they won the 2020 championship actually they’re pretty good
@SportsGoblin yeah the Storm; they play in uhh… “Angel of the Winds Arena”
@SportsGoblin i don’t even remember the sonics
@SportsGoblin as a nor’westerner my sports takes default to “all the seattle teams suck except the sonics; man, they should bring back the sonics”
@SportsGoblin geo (the MC of blue scholars) once had a tweet which went like “the reason why i talk so much about food and sports instead of politics is because those things are much more political than politics” and i still think about it sometimes
@SportsGoblin sometimes you just gotta hit that RPG stats sheet feel but don’t want to go through all the effort of creating a character so you get really into baseball instead
@witchfynder_finder me too thanks
like i think they just cut library science from elementary education instead of modernizing it
FEEL FREE TO CORRECT ME IF I’M WRONG
the contemporary equivalent is the URL but something tells me they don’t have classes on those to the same extent
@aescling i regret to inform you that web browsers are actually not very good XML processors
@aescling that would imply anybody ever implemented it in the first place
if you are up on Web Standards then you probably know that DOM4, the W3C specification, no longer exists and has been replaced with the DOM Living Standard, developed by WHATWG, which makes this sort of specificity about a thousand times harder
if you have interacted with RDF before, you may know about something called rdf:XMLLiteral, which is a very useful and important datatype for encoding XML data directly in RDF datasets
if you have read the actual RDF 1.1 specifications, you may be surprised to learn that rdf:XMLLiteral is non‐normative, because it depends on DOM4, which is a specification which had not yet reached Recommendation status at the time of publication
can you imagine if actual programmers working on APIs flagged the parts of their programs with non‐stable dependencies the way that W3C does
what bothers me the zeroth most about leftpad is that the criticisms of this thread are not in any way specific to leftpad
and what actually got me thinking about this was the YAML processor which ships by default in Ruby and is used in virtually every Rails application
the number of times when i have written
const hex = codepoint.toString(16);
return `U+${hex.length >= 4 ? "" : Array(4 - hex.length).fill(0).join("")}${hex.toUpperCase()}`;
it’s not that hard
what bothers me third most about leftpad is that this is not a situation where DRY is applicable; it is clearer and less ambiguous to just write this as a one‐to‐three‐liner directly in your code
Administrator / Public Relations for GlitchCat. Not actually glitchy, nor a cat. I wrote the rules for this instance.
“Constitutionally incapable of not going hard” — @aescling
“Fedi Cassandra” – @Satsuma
I HAVE EXPERIENCE IN THINGS. YOU CAN JUST @ ME.
I work for a library but I post about Zelda fanfiction.
For the time being, this is mostly a mirror of <https://status.ladys.computer/>. Want to get in touch? E·mail me!