pooberbee

joined 2 years ago
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[–] pooberbee@lemmy.ml 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

When I was doing more remoting into servers, having tmux was great. These days it's all local dev, so it's far less important to me. Plus, I had gotten to a place where my tiling WM, tmux, terminal tabs, and vim tabs were all competing for keyboard shortcuts, and it was driving me crazy.

[–] pooberbee@lemmy.ml 1 points 9 months ago (4 children)

I prefer to use my WM and a lightweight terminal instead of term tabs or tmux. If another window is going to be short-lived, I won't bother, but for longer tasks I'll move to a new workspace, often opening new terminals and file managers, as needed.

[–] pooberbee@lemmy.ml 14 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (6 children)

Yeah, it's basically a tiling window manager that lets you expand each workspace horizontally and scroll left and right through it. The value for me is that I often want each window in a workspace to be a certain size. For example, my browser is fullscreen, and my password manager is half a screen off to one side. My terminals are usually half a screen, sometimes stacked if they're just for monitoring or something, and my IDE is fullscreen all the way to the right of them.

[–] pooberbee@lemmy.ml 42 points 9 months ago

I really want to see a Steve Urkel "Did I do that?" sticker for completeness.

[–] pooberbee@lemmy.ml 7 points 10 months ago

Every day in standup

[–] pooberbee@lemmy.ml 21 points 10 months ago
[–] pooberbee@lemmy.ml 2 points 10 months ago

You coud try eating the pellicle from a batch of kombucha.

[–] pooberbee@lemmy.ml 3 points 10 months ago

I've been each of these at some point.

[–] pooberbee@lemmy.ml 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

What do you use for aquafaba? I'd worry about the strong flavor messing things up.

[–] pooberbee@lemmy.ml 12 points 10 months ago (1 children)

If you want to improve your problem solving skills, I'd suggest solving actual problems. Data structures and algorithms can be very satisfying in their own right, but the real value is in taking a real-world problem and translating it into code.

It also depends what you want to do with your knowledge. There are domains that are deeply technical and require a lot of the things you've mentioned, but they also tend to be pretty hard to break into. A lot of software is not so deep. Any software project will have need for good domain modeling, architecture, and maintainability. Again, these are things best learned through practice.

[–] pooberbee@lemmy.ml 2 points 10 months ago

Perlence subrange 6-36 is good too

[–] pooberbee@lemmy.ml 13 points 10 months ago

Both numbers are valuable, but the visualization is bad. Per capita is very nearly not visualized at all.

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