I read the post title as “assigned landlord at birth” for a moment, and I was like, yeah that is probably true for most people with money.
Now to restore cosmic balance: bitch fuck bitch fuck.
I read the post title as “assigned landlord at birth” for a moment, and I was like, yeah that is probably true for most people with money.
Now to restore cosmic balance: bitch fuck bitch fuck.
I’m using value in the loosest sense, like how all objects are values.
So now if you have three implementations of IProductService
, how do you know which one is configured?
I’m not exactly sure what you mean. Doesn’t all dependency injection work the way I described?
Without being familiar with the framework, you can’t trace your way from the class getting injected into to the configuration, even if you’re experienced with the language.
Dependency injection is so much worse. Oh, hey, where’d this value come from? Giant blob of opaque reflection code.
Why would anyone want their diplomacy interrupted, even as the one being affected? It’s not like diplomacy is some evil spell. A successful diplomacy check means you were able to have small talk, relate, and do all the normal things strangers do to put each other at ease. You don’t “defend” against diplomacy!
Imagine trying to agree on a treaty with some jester interrupting every 54 seconds…
That said, there are cases of players noticing emergent behaviour in games! For example: https://twitter.com/JoelBurgess/status/1428008041887281157
I’m upvoting you, but I’m not happy about it.
The real interesting debate is between ((f) 1)
and f()(1)
.
It used to be AGPL, now it’s SSPL.
Eh, beamer is more than enough for most presentations. If your slideshow needs to be that flashy, you probably need more substance.
git puts track changes to shame.
You’re absolutely right about compatibility though.
It’s common when you “wrap” one file type inside another. Like .tar combines multiple files into one, then .gz compresses a single file.
You also see it with PGP (encryption).
Why not .tar.xz?
In the sense that a CD player learns new music when you insert a disc, yes.
Now kiss