Big decisions are really just the sum of the many little decisions that were made before them. On a scale of 1-3, how familiar are you with protocol buffers?
reserved 1; reserved "i_dont_get_it"; int32 basic_familiarity = 2; int32 these_should_be_enums = 3; Today on Getting Totally Sidetracked with Linux Commands, a one-liner that prints all subdirectories without a .git in them:
find . -maxdepth 1 -type d -exec test ‘!’ -e ‘{}/.git’ ‘;’ -printf "not git repo: %p\n"
With a little help from https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/525534/ Turns out humans also have artificial intelligence. It looks like we all know how to succeed on our own but most of the time we’re just referencing past examples. It’s a big, wonderful, dangerous, and important world out there… but today, I am really excited for just one comparatively little, relatively short, but singularly important thing that will hopefully happen tomorrow. If you’re “paying” attention to something, you ought to be getting value in the exchange. 11/10 times the problem is user input error I sometimes see birds walking and think they must not be very excited about wherever it is they’re going.