Then 2 weeks after this, looking at the chaos that is your disorganized, jumbled mess of code angry and disappointed in yourself.
Rinse and repeat.
Am i the only one who does this
Out with the old...
and in with the new...
Django actually has a built-in tag specifically for generating the latin gibberish used in samples. They already solved every real problem for developers, so they proceeded to solve problems you didn’t even know you wanted solved.
I can’t even style a SCROLLBAR without it looking like a potato.
Big things are happening, people. Teammates are frequently coming to me for help on their projects.
Do I always know the answers to their questions? Absolutely not. But they THINK I know the answers. Which actually means more, if you don’t think about it.
You know how there are a lot of programming languages that people say are “really powerful if you know how to use them”? And how usually those languages aren’t at all worth the time? I think Haskell might actually be worth the time. After a hiatus I’ve come back to it and love it. I hardly know how to use it, but at least I can perceive how it might be really powerful.
Prolog is still the worst, though.
All that wasted time
Before and after adding css animations
before and after tie dye
I like Cilk++. It’s so nice to just be like “Hey I want this for loop to have some parallelism” then only have to replace the “for” with “cilk_for”.
I continue to be surprised today. Haskell is also cool, at least based on what I’m reading. I haven’t written any yet, though, so we’ll see.
Maybe I’m just in an open mood. Should I break out the old assembly docs and test that theory?
.... Nah, I definitely shouldn’t do that.
You’d think after all the time I’ve spent on front-end dev I’d be able to at least write efficient CSS. You’d think.
he/himComplaining on Tumblr is a good alternative to punching my computer screen, right?
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