They installed some sort of sound isolating suspended/floating (?) ceiling in my apartment. I absolutely love it. In my neighbors apartment I could constantly hear people above, but in mine it’s almost always silent.
They installed some sort of sound isolating suspended/floating (?) ceiling in my apartment. I absolutely love it. In my neighbors apartment I could constantly hear people above, but in mine it’s almost always silent.
Your answer doesn’t give confidence that you care about how the code looks. Could imply that you’re sloppy. Some people are very opiniated about style and think it matters a lot. They would be unhappy with people who say it doesn’t really matter.
They’d likely welcome fixes or comments on style. Other people would be very angry if you held up their PR with such trivialities.
I had strong style preferences when I was younger, but after working on so many projects with different styles I really don’t care anymore about any particular style. I just make sure to seamlessly match the style of the code around it.
Not enough information.
New team member? Show them the style guide and where it doesn’t match.
Is the style guidelines consistently followed elsewhere? If not, I’d just approve it.
Do I have a good relationship with the other developer, and can they handle criticism? If not, I probably would not want to be the one reviewing it, but if I did I would likely let it go and fix it later. Fight more important battles.
Otherwise, how important is that piece of code? I’d immediately approve a one-off script, but if it’s an core piece of code, I assume the dev missed it and point it out. Happens to everyone.
etc. etc.
The US started using mailboxes 14 years after the UK
In 1849, the Royal Mail first encouraged people to install letterboxes to facilitate the delivery of mail. Before then, letterboxes of a similar design had been installed in the doors and walls of post offices for people to drop off outgoing mail.
In 1863, with the creation of Free City Delivery, the US Post Office Department began delivering mail to home addresses.
Putting Ctrl in the home row by replacing the useless Caps-Lock is sufficient for me .
Alt is easily reached with the thumbs and shift is already close enough to the home row, with shift-ctrl using both pinkies.
No, of course it’s not surprising that they’re not a charity. Sure, the big app stores exploit their near-monopolies with exorbitant fees.
Good for Apple, Valve and Google, but I think it’s better that game dev studios and app developers get money instead. However, devs don’t currently have a real choice but to pay up.
Competition can change that, so we should support technically worse stores like Epic so developers will not have to pay their unreasonably high fees.
Yeah, I understand why people like and buy from Steam. It gives real value.
However, especially for smaller game studios, I believe I get more value if actual game developers get more money than Steam getting it. Let’s say a studio gets $1m in revenue after years of work. Having $180k more ($120k Epic fee vs $300k Steam fee) to spend on artists and developers for their next games/DLCs is a big difference.
Those $300k is literally 0.003409% of Steam’s revenue (estimated 8.8 billion in 2020). Valve could have an army of over 40,000 developers at a yearly $200k compensation and still be profitable just from selling other people’s games.
So I make a big convenience sacrifice when I buy from Epic. I also don’t like to support Tencent. But unless the dev is selling Steam keys directly from their web site, that’s where they get the most money.
Steam is a better product, but you give less money to the developers of the actual game. Unless it has Steam exclusives (e.g. Steam workshop) I would rather buy wherever I give the devs most money.
Yes, those are all unreasonably high, which is why they have so many billions of dollars in profit. The cost of running their services is a pittance compared to their revenues.
It’s pretty simple to rate limit requests yourself.