

Federated git hosting platform when?


Federated git hosting platform when?
Something about this composition is giving AI, but the line art says hand made…
Traced AI art, perhaps?


Not wanting to maintain a multi-language repo, and not wanting to maintain support for rust integration
Edit: I kinda assumed the guy in the pic was that kernel maintainer who kept throwing a stink about Rust code, but it’s apparently not
I like solving puzzles, and I have a knack for programming specifically


Once i have a solid implementation, I wanna morph it into a custom scripting language for generating diagrams (a la graphviz or mermaid js)


I literally just wrote this a few hours ago (line 55)

“Am I gonna find out why they call you ‘Peggy’?”


IIRC, kernel level anti cheat works for linux. It’s at the company’s discretion if they enable support for Linux clients


Never make things more “impressive”
Make them more comprehensible
Reduce the cognitive load required to understand and reason about a piece of code. Honestly, the more you can express complicated ideas simply, the more impressive you are


I did this once
I was generating a large fake dataset that had to make sense in certain ways. I created a neat thing in C# where you could index a hashmap by the type of model it stored, and it would give you the collection storing that data.
This made obtaining resources for generation trivial
However, it made figuring out the order i needed to generate things an effing nightmare
Of note, a lot of these resource “Pools” depended on other resource Pools, and often times, adding a new Pool dependency to a generator meant more time fiddling with the Pool standup code


Separate out those “concerns”, into their own object/interface, and pass them into the class / function at invocation (Dependency Injection)
public Value? Func(String arg) {
if (arg.IsEmpty()) {
return null;
}
if (this.Bar == null) {
return null;
}
// ...
return new Value();
/// instead of
if (!arg.IsEmpty) {
if (this.Bar != null) {
// ...
return new Value();
}
}
return null;
}


if it’s not in git / SVC, add it as is. Create a “refactor” branch, and liberally use commits
Treat it like a decompilation
Figure out what something does, and rename it (with a stupidly verbose name, if you have to). Use the IDE refactor tools to rename all instances of that identifier
Take a function, figure out what it does, and refactor it in a way that makes sense to you
Use the editor’s diff mode to compare duplicate code, extract out anything different into a variable or callback, and combine the code into a function call. Vscode’s “select for compare” and “compare with selected” are useful for this
Track what you’re doing / keep notes in something like Obsidian. You can use [[Wikilinks]] syntax to link between notes, which lets you build a graph structure using your notes as nodes
be cognizant of “Side Effects”
For example, a function or property, or class might be invoked using Reflection, via a string literal (or even worse, a constructed string). And renaming it can cause a reflective invocation somewhere else random to fail
Or function or operator overloading/overiding doing something bizarre
Or two tightly coupled objects that mutate each other, and expect certain unstated invariants to be held (like, foo() can only be called once, or thingyA.len() must equal thingyB.len()
You can use these to more thoroughly compare behavior between the original and a refactor
I use Hoppscotch
I did it once to pull out data from a spreadsheet into a database. Specifically, I needed "${DataType}${Month}" for each month for 3 different datatypes
Iirc, i used an sql pivot (or unpivot) in that query too
Usually, it’s situations like this where you’re parsing data from strings, and you need some glue code to interface between the input data, and the date library you’re using to actually resolve the datetime


Use SystemD timers, you animal


Think of it more like pre-canned build scripts. I can just write a script (DockerFile), which tells docker how to prepare the environment for my app. Usually, this is just pulling the pre-canned image for the app, maybe with some extra dependencies pulled in.
This builds an image (a non-running snapshot of your environment), which can be used to run a container (the actual running app)
Then, i can write a config file (docker-compose.yaml) which tells docker how to configure everything about how the container talks to the host.
The benefit of this, is that I don’t have to configure the host in any way to build / host the app (other than installing docker). Just push the project files and docker files, and docker takes care of everything else
This makes for a more reliable and dependable deploy
You can even develop the app locally without having any of the devtools installed on the host
As well, this makes your app platform agnostic. As long as it has docker, you don’t need to touch your build scripts to deploy to a new host, regardless of OS
A second benefit is process isolation. Should your app rely on an insecure library, or should your app get compromised, you have a buffer between the compromised process and the host (like a light weight VM)
Do you want less people to eat meat? Or do you just want to be a righteous snob on the internet?
Because those goals are mutually exclusive