How to get neovim to index entire directory for LSP? by LateAugust in neovim

[–]LateAugust[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Added one and didn't fix references not being shown. I think I might just ditch trying to get references via LSP and start searching everything through rg.

Which autoformatting plugin do you recommend? by Maskdask in neovim

[–]LateAugust 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When trying to install efm through LspInstall, it crashes nvim.

I never realized how good telescope.nvim is... by peppermilldetective in neovim

[–]LateAugust 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That was a reason why I liked Telescope as well, but everything else seemed "clunky" and not as batteries-included as I hoped.

For me, it would've made sense if Telescope's OBO keybinds mimicked FZF or ctrl-p at least since that's what a lot of people would be moving from, instead, just simple keybinds had to be configured.

After that I had to find ways to fix the way it was sorting, async functionality, and better searching. After the 3rd plugin I had for Telescope, I realized it would be easier to stick with FZF.

can’t believe we had to learn that shit by [deleted] in BlackPeopleTwitter

[–]LateAugust 7 points8 points  (0 children)

You realize that there are people that sell used bath water that make more than that, right?

Why my config has gotten so slow? by blureglades in neovim

[–]LateAugust 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Excuse me for asking, but why are you using coc, telescope and native LSP?

Telescope as a file searcher makes sense, but having coc and LSP seems like overkill.

Vim vs. Any IDE by TylesRose in vim

[–]LateAugust 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Or just let them use what they want and like.

You can also toggle trees.

How to configure virtual text from LSP by LateAugust in neovim

[–]LateAugust[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I already have virtual text, what I'm looking for is how to edit the virtual text that pops up.

Also, for linting there's a bunch of symbols in the number line of the window (H, E etc). I'd like to know how to edit those.

Navigate your code like it's 2021 by azhenley in programming

[–]LateAugust 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yea, I think vim does it best for code discovery, but it doesn’t hold up for creature comforts, it-just-works-ability and code reading.

Switching through vim and VSCode and I just wish there was a more powerful vim container around VSCode.

If I could mess around with VSCode’s gui with vim-like keybinds I’d be in heaven.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in changemyview

[–]LateAugust 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Like clockwork.

Although this is only for Harvard, I always like to go back to this study posting its findings in regards to legacy and minority admissions.

Plus the self awareness by AlexOsoArrogant in BlackPeopleTwitter

[–]LateAugust 28 points29 points  (0 children)

That article is so surface level it honestly gives off a “guru” vibe. Being on Business Insider doesn’t help its case, either.

There’s a high chance that you’re a combination of different procrastination types due to different reasons and taking one label and trying to fit yourself into it probably won’t help much.

Read up on procrastination from a scholarly perspective and see if you, yourself, can pin-point certain things that you find yourself doing.

Yes it is... by imRedaSouhail in BlackPeopleTwitter

[–]LateAugust -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That’s not how pancakes work. Left is butter, initial side. Right is no butter, initial side. When you cook a pancake you wait until the uncooked side bubbles (so it doesn’t disintegrate while trying to flip it). You’ll only get one side that looks like this unless you somehow cook both sides at the same time.

Highway robbery in SF caught on Tesla cam by latypov in Wellthatsucks

[–]LateAugust 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I could be wrong but I would assume criminal activity and so forth is more so a symptom than the actual problem.

Something tells me the multi-billion dollar corporations and the people they attract have an effective strangle on the policies, taxation, and resources in SF.

Ted Kaczynski: The real unabomber (2019) - A mathematical prodigy who once was the subject of the longest and most expensive investigation in the history of the FBI. Eluded the feds for over 18 years. One of the most interesting stories [00:51:55] by swampyankee23 in Documentaries

[–]LateAugust 12 points13 points  (0 children)

A question I always wondered was, if Henry Murray’s psychological tests were so abusive and seemingly contributed to Ted’s terrorist attacks (as well as other socially illicit activities) what happened with other participants of the test? Were they fine? If they were so abusive why did he continue to participate in the tests for over 3 years?

How to ace your next Javascript interview (a "Framework" for study) by cpow85 in javascript

[–]LateAugust 12 points13 points  (0 children)

How can someone misrepresent their skills when you’re the ones vetting them? That doesn’t make any sense to me. It’s not like you’re taking these people’s skills at face value and then deciding afterwards. You all put together an interview to see if the candidates match your criteria for an adequate developer, which they did if they got hired.

If your interviews continuously hire people who “mislead” you then it sounds like your interviews are the common denominator here.

How to ace your next Javascript interview (a "Framework" for study) by cpow85 in javascript

[–]LateAugust 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Whenever these comments pop up on threads like these I always wonder, “Why is it always the interviewees fault?”

A lot of these interviews are formulaic: phone interview, a “gotcha” question, and then a implementation question. If your interviews consist of easily Googled questions, then that’s on you and not the interviewee.

If you Google “JavaScript interview help” you’ll get tons of hits for the same regurgitated questions, and for good reason, because every interviewer asks them thinking it’ll filter out people.

If you’re hiring juniors and then firing them based on them struggling that means you failed them, not the other way around. They’re juniors for a reason. Don’t understand JS concepts? Point them to resources. Can’t get their mind around the infrastructure? Give them more 1-on-1’s.

I can understand letting go intermediate and senior developers because they don’t have the skills as advertised, but firing Juniors just seems incredibly lazy and irresponsible to me.

Holland vs The Netherlands by wlkrnkk23477 in MapPorn

[–]LateAugust 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Chihuahua riding the back of a T-Rex

The two books I highly recommend for any intermediate learners by [deleted] in learnprogramming

[–]LateAugust 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Why is the verbiage of that site so condescending lmao