Muchos de estos jueces no tienen arreglo. Llevan toda la vida haciendo lo que les da la gana.
Muchos de estos jueces no tienen arreglo. Llevan toda la vida haciendo lo que les da la gana.
How to successfully use a tool like cursor's composer or equivalent.
One of my faves. After this one I started looking for similar ones, and ended up watching all of these: Horimiya, Komi can't communicate, From me to you, A Sign of Affection,... and probably a few more.
My experience with cursor+sonnet is pretty close to what Addy talks about in his article. After trial and error I got to something like the"Constant Conversation" pattern before knowing this was a thing π. With Cursor it is very important to use the context appropriately and to avoid lengthy convos
Good morning! This is just a kind reminder that you are not an imposter β€οΈ
I'm not posting that much lately because life π€£, but I don't find your likes annoying.
Ok, found it.
bsky.app/profile/hada...
Do you review the summaries yourself? From the diagram, it's not clear if that part is also automated and most are assuming it is.
π€£ I always use Ctrl+R even if I end up writing the whole thing.
While using English the same as you, I think I read about the "Jot" pronunciation somewhere, but I forgot. When using Spanish, I say:
J = "Jota" (HOE-tah)
W = "Uve Doble" (OO-veh DOE-bleh)
T = "TΓ©" (TEH)
π€£
Manual git/github. Yeah, having to manually merge base changes into dependent PRs is the main friction point. Would be nice if GitHub could auto-merge them.
Made the switch two months ago. Composer is worth it if you pay to be able to use unlimited Claude. For the best results I never tell it to implement anything directly. I always take 2 steps:
1. Request implementation details so I can confirm it makes sense
2. If ok, proceed with implementation
Yes, in my team we do this every once in a while to avoid generating PRs that are too big, when the changes are related to the same feature.
This looks great! I'm tempted to replace our nextra docs with this.
This is the way π. I started a bit late but it's been a year now and I love it.
We stayed in Plan for a few days at the end of September. I loved it. Such a calm and beautiful place!
If you like cheese, you probably already know, but the ones from this place are amazing. They only accept cash though! π
g.co/kgs/6DtfCMJ.
A nativity scene made out of peanuts.
Wife: Hereβs $200. Go buy a nativity set. If thereβs anything left over, you can spend it on guitar stuff.
Me:
React 19
forwardRef β ref
A notification with the text: "This code is only valid for new cloud users.".
The code seems to be only for new users too.
The package has been βjust around the cornerβ for 5 hours. We all know it'll arrive the second I leave the house. π
An image showing what I describe
Fun fact: If someone quotes a post of yours in a way that is unwelcome (as is commonplace on Twitter/X) there is a tool to combat the unwanted attention. Simply click the three dot menu on the quote post & click "Detach quote". This removes your post from their quote post. Useful to know, do share!
Save for important meetingsπ
"AI is like having a very eager junior developer on your team. They can write code quickly, but they need constant supervision and correction."
There's something really exciting about diving into a new language. TypeScript is definitely worth exploring. :)
I'm so sorry about your aunt's diagnosis. Sending caring thoughts to you both during this difficult time.
Screenshot displaying musicforprogramming's credits page that simulates a code editor interface, showcasing various contributors and their roles.
Thanks for the rec, amazing UI and music collection! I see it's maintained @datassette.bsky.social and built with @svelte.dev.
At work, we are on 18.3.1, we can't upgrade till Ant Design supports react 19.
Here is the code for my universal version of react-scan:
github.com/NullVoxPo...
Copy it / install it in to any
- Svelte
- Angular
- Ember
- React
- Lit
- Preact
- Solid
- etc
App, and see what unneeded work might be being done!
(Or see all the hidden work you're managing and forgot about!)
Interesting approach to E2E testing: define actions and write assertions in plain English while getting type-safe data extraction. No selectors to maintain, looks neat, but I'm curious about CI stability, test reproducibility and debugging failed runs.
Is there an open source software maintainer in your life? Are you one?
GitHub has a private community you can apply for at maintainers.github.com!
Folks discuss common problems/solutions, thereβs a direct line to GitHub product & betas, and I post funding opportunities.
Spread the word please :)