I had the same question, and decided that the pour over is the closest in the image. I’ve been an anarchist a long time anyway.
I had the same question, and decided that the pour over is the closest in the image. I’ve been an anarchist a long time anyway.
Amusingly, there’s an issue with the app I use for youtube that means I’m stuck with a dubbed version in a language I don’t speak.
The discipline is “mathematics.” It’s really not unreasonable that in some parts of the world, it got shortened to maths.
I use keepassdx which has an extension for working with Firefox. I use syncthing to copy the database file between my phone, laptop, and backup location.
I’m guessing you don’t mean commits that actually bring updates from a different branch in? I’m responsible for a bunch of commits that catch my feature branch up to main and a couple that bring my branches into main.
If we were working on the same project, what would you want to see for those? This is hosted on a private gh repo, but it’s a small shop and we were working on a tight deadline for an MVP release and were not using PRs for the stuff I was working on.
The boss (co-owner of the business) is the Sr dev on the project and until recently was the only sr dev in the whole shop. I actually don’t think he has experience with using git in a team context.
One of my other tasks is working on internal docs (which didn’t exist before I joined the team) that would include git best practices for branching strategies and commit messages, so I’m interested in what folks who have more experience than I do would like to see as I try to nudge the team practices.
Git won’t let the second person push if their commit history doesn’t line up with the origin branch.
It should be trivial to do a git pull --rebase
to move your new commit after the upstream version, but as far as I can tell, no one on my current project remembers this (or perhaps they’re using gui tools or something). Our log is full of “merge origin/main onto main”.
We were definitely doing it on forums/newsgroups/listservs and in chat at least as far back as the early 90s. Using full keyboards.
You can use keepass in multiple ways where the password never touches the clipboard. I usually use it with a Firefox extension that fills in the fields. You can also have it swap back to your last window and autotype (not sure exactly what the mechanism is).
If you do copy, it clears it from the clipboard history ~10s after copying. I’m pretty sure that’s configurable.
I did also, because my feed is mostly coding stuff and I actually use lisp.
No, that’s a person who always believes they’re sick. You’re thinking of hemophiliac.