This change would also be bad for anything that scans for keywords, which includes most applicant tracking software.
This change would also be bad for anything that scans for keywords, which includes most applicant tracking software.
Can we talk about how utterly absurd it is that there isn’t an obvious answer to this question yet? Feels like we’ve gone backwards from the AIM Direct Connect of old.
Other people: Hmm I only use a few commands on this thing, I wonder if I can just refer to them by number or something?
You: Googling African tongue-snapping languages
So, only about a decade until reaching feature parity with something like lazygit?
Interesting project but this write-up has a bizarre focus on number of lines of code, which doesn’t appear to differ substantially between the two approaches.
RE your edit: I also support that conclusion and I’m glad you’ll give it a shot yourself. A mindset that helps me is this: commenting is part of the iterative code writing process. When I’m struggling to put a concise and understandable comment above some code, it almost universally means that there’s something about the code itself I should arrange more clearly. This is your chance to do some rubber ducking, it’s valuable to both you and the next person to read your code!
You joke but comic mono is startlingly easy to look at…
I will never use a terminal that requires a subscription to use my own damn computer.
Early days is one thing, but if this is the entirety of the code
# WIP
Then there isn’t much to have a discussion about…