Forks do not exist in git. It’s a GitHub feature, and a massive blunder at the same time.
Forks do not exist in git. It’s a GitHub feature, and a massive blunder at the same time.
Yeah. They only read textbooks to quiet kids, they do not have unpaid overtime at home for grading tests, and earn a million dollars every month. Lazy bastards.
Could be that. It uses multicast on specific ports but I don’t remember the details.
Is there a downside? I’m confused.
I don’t understand the downvotes. You’re right on all points. If the task is too big, it can take years from testing another solution to using it for real.
I’m bored too, but not bored enough to post shitty shit like this.
Do you do it yourself with a European recipe? You would get the same result I guess.
Back when Nginx started, Apache was the only alternative and a big pain in the ass. That’s how it became popular.
That’s boring. Altman wants to save the world whatever that means, not solve the shitty problems that poor people have.
Is it popular? Never heard of that in France.
This game was released 10 years after git, and we already had backups since the 80s. Why are they lying?
Only Americans seem to say this. Why? I’ve seen a lot of couples at work and no one minds.
EVs: too expensive, I can’t afford one. Chargers: there are no chargers where I live.
That’s it. Fix those problems and people will buy.
Having a “library” is already a crime in some countries so…
Downvoted.
Every personal project is good as long as you try to make it professional. It doesn’t need to be perfect but you can show that you made an effort to clean your stuff. I’m biased because I’ve been doing C++ for a long time, but every language is worth it. Also what I’m saying may be specific to my location and kind of job, but I tend to think it’s kind of universal. To get a job, you need to show that you have a broad view of the software ecosystem.
For example for C++, you can do:
I think it applies to every language, just change C++ to any other language but the other bullet points don’t change. And if you have some code to review, post it here and we’ll read it like a real “merge request,” it can be interesting.
Do it in Python. It’s a PITA in C++ if you don’t know that language. Read A Tour of C++ instead.
Python for the web, C++ for everything else. C++ is still popular, especially the modern version and you’ll get a good salary. But you should learn HTTP with other tools like Python.
With both Python and C++ skills, you’ll get jobs everywhere. Python for tools and CI, C++ for applications.
How can such a wrong answer get so many points? Clones and forge forks are unrelated. First, GitHub or GitLab cannot and could not link clones together without analyzing the remotes of each clone.
FFS it’s a tech community…