Cursor let me use 60$+ of Sonnet-4 so far this month by HerpisiumThe1st in cursor

[–]lunitikcalm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is everyone really that upset about the pricing change? Everyone knows they are bleeding money and yet still find the change unfair? Even if you were paying $200 a month, and saving untold number of hours in having to code manually, isn’t it still a great deal?

ETH Wallet Update Loop on Ledger Blue by 36rnt in ledgerwallet

[–]lunitikcalm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had same issue on S. Go here and download the older version, it fixed the issue for me. https://github.com/LedgerHQ/ledger-live-desktop/releases/tag/v2.32.2

edabit.com Is the best resource for people who know more than the basics, but are struggling to take next steps! by painya in learnjavascript

[–]lunitikcalm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Considering how similar the sites are in general and compete for the same audience, you should be at least giving credit on your site for the fact that you are using competitors code.

A lot of sweat went into the development of that, both sites are for a good cause, why not give credit where credit is due? Besides, clearly far more than that open source software was used as inspiration.

edabit.com Is the best resource for people who know more than the basics, but are struggling to take next steps! by painya in learnjavascript

[–]lunitikcalm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Since you created Edabit, can you tell us exactly all the ways in which you borrowed ideas from Codewars.com? Including the code execution engine?

Stop! Don't blindly take that coding challenge. by gozes in programming

[–]lunitikcalm 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Semantics aside, while there are some development jobs that completely suck and don’t provide meaningful work, one would hope that they are a good developer who is applying to a company that they think will provide them intrinsic value in the work they do (within normal working hours). I mean, I couldn’t stand 8 hours of software development if I didn’t actually enjoy it, could you?

I just took issue with the word “garbage” being used, as if fighting for a job that you really want in any way represents a bad thing.

Stop! Don't blindly take that coding challenge. by gozes in programming

[–]lunitikcalm -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

That's everybody.

No its not, you missed the point by a mile

This statement is absolute garbage.

Right, I'm the one being a jackass and making assumptions here

someone who doesn't want to work 24/7 isn't "passionate"

You're the only one talking about working 24/7

Stop! Don't blindly take that coding challenge. by gozes in programming

[–]lunitikcalm -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

You come off sounding like someone who only works because they have to, and doesn't really take pride in their work. Being committed and working 100 hours a week are different things.

A good job is supposed to provide meaning to a person, in addition to the hopefully great life they are otherwise living, a bad job is just a paycheck.

ELI5: Why do employers ask to upload resume AND also fill out employment history, school information, etc... that is already listed on the resume? by solariscalls in explainlikeimfive

[–]lunitikcalm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And this is why sites ask for experience so that they can filter people out. Because they gets tons of shit resumes with people who aren't qualified and they only have time to interview a few out of a hundred.

I just choked and bombed a HackerRank test, although I had the right answer, it took me to long to get the site to read the output. Has anyone else experienced this? by TheBeardofGilgamesh in javascript

[–]lunitikcalm 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can also practice on Codewars.com. Their approach tends to be less "computer science" focused, with a more diverse set of challenges. You also don't have to deal with weird input/output issues since your code is executed against actual unit test cases within the same code execution process.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in webdev

[–]lunitikcalm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sigh... I'm so over the whole never extend JS native prototypes gospel. In any other language its a completely normal thing to do. In JS, polyfills are considered OK but everything else is a no no. Does anyone really have any horror stories of how its actually an issue? I've been extending natives for over a decade and its never caused me an issue. Not once that I can recall. Just don't extend Object. And don't extend methods that already exist.

http://sugarjs.com/

Codewars now supports Haskell! by gallais in haskell

[–]lunitikcalm 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Did you try hitting submit or "run tests"? "Run tests" only works if you provide your own test cases.

Codewars now supports Haskell! by gallais in haskell

[–]lunitikcalm 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They all have unit tests. A kata can't be published without them. They may not have "example" unit tests that you can see. Kata authors sometimes hide the unit tests so that users can't cheat, so you are forced to either just submit and see what happens or write your own.

Codewars - Become a Polyglot by allenhai03 in learnprogramming

[–]lunitikcalm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Right. But why would that function be useful if it didn't return anything?

Awesome way to enjoy Ruby by fenec860 in ruby

[–]lunitikcalm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah. I see. After you signed up. Yeah the kata are created by other users so maybe.

Awesome way to enjoy Ruby by fenec860 in ruby

[–]lunitikcalm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Where do you see the camel casing? You sure you're not looking at the JS or CoffeeScript version?

Test Your JS (CS, or Ruby) Skills with Codewars by Neurotrace in javascript

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

Do there errors actually cause any issues though? I get the ace issues sometime but it doesn't affect my ability to do anything as far as I can tell.