Nice! Sounds like a good use case.
Nice! Sounds like a good use case.
Do you write it for work?
As someone who spent 2 years learning and writing PowerShell for work… It’s… Okay. Way easier to make stuff work then bash, and gets really powerful when you make libraries for it. But… I prefer Python and GoLang for building scripts and small apps.
You’re in the wrong place if you want to pitch C over Rust 😅
I mean, I rock JetBrains for a lot of stuff. It’s a pig on resources, but man does it have a great feature set.
I had the same prob, when I swapped to Codium and paired down my plugins, it was snappy again.
Can you adjust it to 4:3?
LazyGit is a thing ❤️🙌
How’s Go for a backend? I’ve used it abit, stupid fast.
VSCodium, because it’s not a plug-in filled beast like my regular VSCode is. Also Micro is neato. Helix seems nice too.
Micro for quick CLI edits. VSCode for mashing text and PowerShell JetBrains Suite for everything else. LazyGit is amazing BTW. Pairs well with LazyDocker.
I never got the whole emacs vs vim thing… I’m here to get work done, not wax about editors all day 🤪 JetBrains on a Mac.
Eclipse… I used that back in college… In 2003…
IIRC it works with TimeShift, aka time machine for Linux.
I use both ALOT professionally. I can say I prefer Python over PowerShell anyway… Except for Windows automation, where PS is actually pretty dope. Bash is okay, I’ve seen folks write shit in it that should have been done in Python, or GoLang, or literally anything else.
That being said, I won’t go near Rust, not because it’s a bad language feature wise, but my brain hurts when I try and read Rust code.
Sounds like you need branch protection rules, which you only get on paid plans. Setting up a org is also a good idea anyway if you plan on working as a team of more then 1-2 additional folks.
I’ve got a Hubitat and it works amazing. Local maker REST API and Google integration. Best of both worlds and no subscription.
I would take a hard look at used HP Enterprise or Cisco gear. HP 25xx series are niiiice.
Both Synology and qnap makes solid products. Just make sure whatever file system you pick for the NAS that it can do snapshots. Wasabi is better if you are long term archiving, but for backups that churn, BB is way cheaper. LGTM.
You mean our code?
It’s all just the same shit copy pasted from StackOverflow from 1998 😂