nieceandtows

joined 2 years ago
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[–] nieceandtows@programming.dev 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Too late. Take your commendation and go.

[–] nieceandtows@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

So you're saying we unlock immortality after another 50billion deaths?

[–] nieceandtows@programming.dev 6 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Wow. This is like decoding some extinct language without a Rosetta Stone. I only sorta understand the concept, but you must be commended for your explanation.

I don't know if it was the same thing, but I grew up hearing that if you mix your drool/saliva before brushing with rice and feed it to chickens, they would die.

[–] nieceandtows@programming.dev 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

What are the chances?

Look at the balls on this guy

The car seems appalled

[–] nieceandtows@programming.dev 20 points 1 year ago (6 children)

Is that unusual?

[–] nieceandtows@programming.dev 19 points 1 year ago

Woke kills dreams

[–] nieceandtows@programming.dev 15 points 1 year ago

That's your next quest marker. Debilitating alcoholism any % speedrun.

 

Even 1080p is failing. Got 480p to upload. Lemmy.world has no problem uploading full size images from iphone.

 
 

New to obsidian. I have installed tasks, and have created a page called widgets/personal.md with the following query:

''''tasks
(not done)
tags include #tasks/personal 
hide backlink
''''

In preview mode, this shows me the list of personal tasks. So far so good. I want to show the contents of this page as an ios widget. I found some tutorials to use widgy and make a widget that shows a page content. When I do that, instead of seeing the output, I'm seeing the above query in the widget. I know that's because that's what is in the file itself.

My question is, is there a way to automatically save the output to a file, or is there a different/better way to create task widgets for different tags?

 

cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/466603

I have a repository on github for a project that deals with importing/processing/sending reports to clients. There is now talk of creating a similar application for a different set of users, without the import part, but multiple send parts. The existing code base already has 90% of what the new application needs (and some extra that is not needed for this new project).

Should I fork the existing project and make the new project, or should I use the 'import project' function on github to create a new project based on the old project, or use the commandline to mirror the old project into a new project, or something else?

In future, there might be more projects that build on top of one of these projects with their own customizations, so I'm looking for a good approach that I can leverage again in future.

Please advise.

 

I have a repository on github for a project that deals with importing/processing/sending reports to clients. There is now talk of creating a similar application for a different set of users, without the import part, but multiple send parts. The existing code base already has 90% of what the new application needs (and some extra that is not needed for this new project).

Should I fork the existing project and make the new project, or should I use the 'import project' function on github to create a new project based on the old project, or use the commandline to mirror the old project into a new project, or something else?

In future, there might be more projects that build on top of one of these projects with their own customizations, so I'm looking for a good approach that I can leverage again in future.

Please advise.

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