Very good post. Very true post.
Very good post. Very true post.
Oh how I can’t wait for the day that I can upgrade to an AMD graphics card instead of using Nvidia
If your pull request doesn’t get merged in, you still learned just as much as if it did, so the time you spent doing it wasn’t wasted. In fact, people may make comments on it explaining why it won’t be merged in, so you’ll learn more than if it was.
You don’t need to be an expert to start contributing—in fact, the best way to improve is to try to contribute, fail, and then learn how to improve next time you tackle and issue :)
Also, your English is very readable. From this comment alone I can assure you it’s more than good enough for writing issues and pull requests. You’re doing great, just keep at it!
If anything, that video makes me want to quit Linux because of how much cringe it made me feel.
I second this. Just going through vimtutor a couple times and then learning how to use the :help pages effectively is all you need to make vim usable.
I’d recommend using neovim over plain vim though, if not for any reason other than it has nicer defaults.
Honestly, one of the best things you could do is use Linux Mint instead of Ubuntu. It’s a lot more new user friendly.
OP, do not use Arch as a beginner unless you’re already a very techy person.
I know people may disagree with this, but y’all, we forget sometimes how confusing even following something like the Arch Wiki can be when you aren’t familiar enough with tech.
You don’t have to learn vi
if you don’t want to. Just switch your default text editor to one that you like (it doesn’t even have to be a GUI one)
I see an opportunity to add on to a comment chain that’s already starting to get too long, I comment!
…and then I upvote
Honestly as far as hiring for this stuff goes, this is more in the “cute” category for me rather than the “annoying” category.
JetBrains brand Integrated Development Environments
I’d imagine it’s because people who use spaces are either further in their career in average (because the modern programming ecosystem in general uses tabs so new devs are more likely to only know that) or they’re just more serious about software development because the kind of person to die on that hill is also the kind of person who is very obsessive about other things as well.
As a full stack cloud dev usually for me it ends up being some lag between when Azure claims a thing was updated and when it actually was.
(shout out to azure B2C custom policies for taking like 10 minutes to actually reflect changes despite giving me a lil green checkmark)