

I certainly don’t agree with the company’s position, but did you read definition 1b? I think you may have stopped reading a little early
I certainly don’t agree with the company’s position, but did you read definition 1b? I think you may have stopped reading a little early
Use pipenv and don’t think about it anymore.
Very little of this is uniquely a problem in Python. It seems to me that your problem is with software development in general.
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This brings back trauma
It’s always Patrick, so both are the same
I have 1010 fingers
You close apps by double tapping the TV/control button then swipe up, similar to other iOS devices. It’s rarely necessary but super easy.
You turn the Apple TV off by tapping the TV/control button and selecting power off.
Typing sucks on all remotes but having an iPhone nearby allows you to use the phone’s keyboard.
Notable. Cross platform (no mobile app), sync with cloud drive of your choice, markdown support, easy interface.
It’s different because when you need a tire, you need it now. When you need a movie it can wait 5 minutes.
It appears you haven’t used chat gpt for coding help.
I don’t follow the 50 character rule, but to answer your first question: imo, no, don’t mention where you fixed the bug. This is a commit message that is explicitly tied to the place where you fixed the bug. You can go into more detail in the PR if you need to.
Reminder that I don’t like the company’s stance on the matter.
What you have posted is your interpretation of the definition, which has little legal or practical value. A product does not need a successor, superior or otherwise, to become obsolete. Nothing you have posted has any relation to the definition of obsolete, and are mostly word play.
That being said, right to repair needs to become a real thing and companies should be supplying repair manuals for items they consider obsolete.