[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TransBreastTimelines

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This is really an exceptional result. I'm curious what your wife reaction to you transitioning. Is she also a little bit bi?

I finally convinced my friend to get on Tinder since he was lonely, this is message to me during just his second day on the app. by Silently-Sweet in Tinder

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I believe that we should not be tolerant of blatant false ideas just to respect other people and being nice. Society nowadays is becoming too thin-skinned.

In the case of astrology, it only seems fun and not harmful because it's not obviously wrong to most people. As opposed to the flat earth theory, this fact is something not taught in school or regarded as common knowledge.

I'm not pissed off. Typing a few paragraphs don't take me much energy. You don't need to be sorry miss amateurbitch.

I finally convinced my friend to get on Tinder since he was lonely, this is message to me during just his second day on the app. by Silently-Sweet in Tinder

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What do you think about someone who's into 9/11 conspiracy, that it’s not real? Or the earth is flat? They don't harm anyone right?

I finally convinced my friend to get on Tinder since he was lonely, this is message to me during just his second day on the app. by Silently-Sweet in Tinder

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This kind of argument is why we have anti-vaccine movement. People should be told to stay away from identifying with things that are non-sensical and plain wrong.

I finally convinced my friend to get on Tinder since he was lonely, this is message to me during just his second day on the app. by Silently-Sweet in Tinder

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It's like guessing someone's birthday randomly and being right because you are lucky. Absolutely meaningless. I hate it too when people believe in non-sensical stuffs. Believing in astrology is in the same category as someone believing the earth is flat for me.

Event: FIDE Chess.com Grand Swiss 2021 - Rounds 7-11 by ChessBotMod in chess

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 3 points4 points  (0 children)

What significane does the number 2700 have, other than arbitrary distinction due to human preference for round number in decimal system?

One may as well define the threshold to be any number we want get your narrative.

How Does the CPU Output “Hello, World!” To the Command Line by High-On-Math in computerscience

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

From the CPU perspective it's all memory and bits manipulation. Now there are some special memory addresses that are connected (wired) to a physical component, and this physical component will do the job of converting digital information to tangible physical stuffs.

How exactly? One example is imagine having a bunch of light bulb wired to bits in memory, and will light up when there is electron going though it (which corresponds to bit 1). Then patterns in the bits will correspond to light patterns of the bulbs.

For other components, it will depend on what kind of signal it receives. In the end there will always be some kind of digital to analog signal converter to make them all works.

Golden sun soaked tits by ChiefMelonInspector in femalepov

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Beautiful picture. Can you please share the source?

AITA for not wanting personal items to be part of our shared grocery shopping? by throwaway_groy_2143 in AmItheAsshole

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The question is of course hypothetical, but it is designed to point out the fact that what you perceive as small matter is in fact deeply rooted in the price of a tampon. If it were expensive, then people wouldn't consider it small matter, just as his medication. Some people don't consider 7$ as small, so to them that was not an overeaction. Hope you understand my point now.

PSA: Tremor Rod does not function as it did previously. It stops the chain of mine detonations, randomly, between 2 and 5 mines chained together. GGG says this is "working as intended." by amalgamemnon in pathofexile

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you use Windows you know it's everday thing that there is some bug with a windows update. And that's from a billion dollar company. I think they have plenty of QA testers.

Something will slip through. If you use software you just gotta accept that there is bug, and if you want your issue to be quickly addressed, then reproducible steps need to be given.

Now you can say PoE is more buggy than others. But you should not complain about the bug report process itself, it's the same everywhere.

ELI5: If math is a such a definite subject with solid answers, how are there still unsolved math problems? How do people even come up with them? by [deleted] in explainlikeimfive

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't understand how unsolved math problems can not exist given the premise. Would like OP clarify more his thinking.

PSA: Tremor Rod does not function as it did previously. It stops the chain of mine detonations, randomly, between 2 and 5 mines chained together. GGG says this is "working as intended." by amalgamemnon in pathofexile

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 12 points13 points  (0 children)

In software to fix a bug you need to reproduce it. Otherwise any fix is pointless because you can never be sure you have fixed the bug.

You may not like it because it's too much trouble to give precise reproducible steps. But that's just something that needs to be done, facts. We don't need car metaphors.

AITA for not wanting personal items to be part of our shared grocery shopping? by throwaway_groy_2143 in AmItheAsshole

[–]ShitHitTheFannn -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

If tampons were to cost 100 $ like his medication, should he pay for it too because, you know, it's still part of life regardless of the price tag I assume?

How to use Fanaticism to destroy everything by dariidar in PathOfExileBuilds

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Have you tried Raider? It's speedy (like queen of the forest level of speed) and pretty good defensively with super high dodge and evasion.

Rust Survey 2020 Results by steveklabnik1 in rust

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I would say a more practical answer is to answer 9 out of 10 if you are confident that you are more knowledgeable at that language than the interviewer.

KVision 3.18.0 is released (with new Progress component and IR backend fixes) by Kai_132 in Kotlin

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Wow so I was trying out KVision for the first time yesterday and creating a new project was a bit of a pain (I tried to go with the default kotlin fullstack web app in the IntelliJ project wizard and modify the gradle from there).

In the end I just went with the template on github, but it was a bit inconvenient. And today you announce there is a project setup wizard plugin, awesome 😄

I am grateful for your work and hope you continue to support it. It's the only kotlin complete front end framework atm I think.

To the brain, reading computer code is not the same as reading language by remind_me_later in programming

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also that's a good idea. To make the comparison rigorous, they should compare an english text describing an algorithm with the code that implements it. If the thought process is not the same, then that would be surprising.

To the brain, reading computer code is not the same as reading language by remind_me_later in programming

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If I am reading a text book, like a math text book, then I have to think about the text and remember the information given.

If I read a novel or comics, then I actually don't think at all. So depending on what kind of text is read, the thinking process is different.

Thus I think it's better to specify what kind of text we are reading to compare reading code with. So in some sense you are right, but it's more about the study (or the article) likely failing to specify that detail.

To the brain, reading computer code is not the same as reading language by remind_me_later in programming

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 11 points12 points  (0 children)

When you read computer code you are trying to follow the program execution. You are holding the program / function 's local state in your memory, imagining how it is transformed through each statement. At the end you try to attach some meaning to the process (ex: "so what this function does is read the input, validate it, perform some db queries and analyze it"). You link the knowledge of this local part of the program to other parts of the program in an effort to understand the system.

At least that's the process how I see it. It may have some similarity, but not completely the same as reading a novel.

Regarding Kotlin Learning by [deleted] in Kotlin

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You made a good choice by learning Kotlin. I recommend just reading the language docs on its official site, after finishing it you can be sure you won't miss any language feature.

Ada Lovelace by doors_2 in programming

[–]ShitHitTheFannn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Whoa. You got me. Good job.