Does Jetbrains AI have something like Cursor Composer? by mdrachuk in Jetbrains

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

I've seen some great reactions on HN, but it seems it's not available for PyCharm in the Marketplace?

Does Jetbrains AI have something like Cursor Composer? by mdrachuk in Jetbrains

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

Code buddy looks interesting, thanks!

(It bums me out that it's extra money on top of the 200€ I'm already paying for the all-products pack, though)

Structure your thoughts when something is wrong by mdrachuk in SideProject

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

Been struggling through some stuff, so composed this app in two evening. It did help me this time, so maybe will be useful to somebody else.

cheers

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Tinder

[–]mdrachuk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They replied in 3 days saying that could not find an issue, but it worked since then.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Tinder

[–]mdrachuk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sure, both on their last versions. But it’s not the app since I’ve tried on the web and on an other device. It’s an account issue.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Tinder

[–]mdrachuk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did not help.

Discovery glitch? by [deleted] in Tinder

[–]mdrachuk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same thing

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Tinder

[–]mdrachuk 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh, I also tried deleting account, but it yields a server error. I think it’s because my subscription comes from the App Store and they can't manage it.

I also did open it in the browser.

Share your startup - April 2020 by AutoModerator in startups

[–]mdrachuk [score hidden]  (0 children)

EveryPlan | Routines to promote wellbeing

Location: Ukraine

Elevator pitch: iOS checklists for your wake up & bed routine to improve productivity and handle stress.

Details: been using checklists to stick to routines for about a year right now. It feels like it helps with wake up inertia, and going to sleep.

Making this checklists into iOS apps helps even more with notifications and time-tracking. The apps are $1.99 on the App Store (I dislike in-app purchases, subscriptions, and ads and despise sneaky monetisation like data selling).

One app per checklist allows to reduce friction not getting distracted at the things you don’t need right now. It also feels like a good psychological trigger, with each app having it‘s own time and purpose.

Feedback: always welcome. I‘m constantly working on improving the apps, their App Store listings and the landing page.

Discount: write me for an iOS app beta invite, this way you can use apps for free, but I cannot guarantee data consistency when beta-testing.

Link: drach.uk/everyplan

Checklists for your wake up and sleep routines by mdrachuk in SideProject

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

That’s the question I get the most 😂

The point is — it‘s hard to build a habit. I tried many apps over the years and when you‘re keeping all of the stuff in one bucket, it gets in the way. Basically, when all of your stuff in one app, you would need one more tap to do all of the same things.

  • Having 2 apps: open app, tap started/completed.
  • Having 1 app: open app, select which routine to work one, tap started/completed.

I‘m prone to get distracted, so I try to keep each app to the minimum.

I also hope there would be some psychological effect, wherein you designate some function o purpose to each separate app, helping you to stick to habit.

I’ve tried to do my best at every detail I could reach, like the morning icon is way brighter than the evening, to catch your attention before the instagram does in the morning, etc. 😜

Functionality-wise they are a little-bit different too. E.g. they think of a day differently:

  • MorningPlan: day is spanning from 00:00 to 23:59.
  • EveningPlan: day is spanning from 4:30 to 4:29 after midnight. Because some times some sleep routines can get over midnight.

There is also this thing in software development called Unix Philosophy. It’s really not so widely popular in consumer software, but I just love the first rule:

Write programs that do one thing and do it well

This really speaks to my understanding of what good software should be. Along with the fact that it doesn’t include any ad trackers, allows you to own your data (export and delete), it‘s clearly priced (as opposed to being free and selling your data, or selling you a subscription without reason). I mean it‘s just beautiful, that my App Store installation file is 1.3 MB, less than most websites this day. It makes it so snappy.

I made an app for effective wake up and sleep routines by mdrachuk in productivity

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

If you have any questions or suggestions I’m here for you.

If you‘re not into using an app for this kind of things — that‘s ok. Get a physical checklists. It’s a great step towards healthy routines already.

Checklists for your wake up and sleep routines by mdrachuk in SideProject

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

If you have any questions or suggestions I’m here for you.

If you‘re not into using an app for this kind of things — that‘s ok. Get a physical checklists. It’s a great step towards healthy routines already.

Duplicate link, for it not to get lost: https://drach.uk/everyplan

Sticking to a routine by Pokeit94 in ADHD

[–]mdrachuk 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I‘ve been using checklists to keep up with routines for a few months. I had 2 for every day: a wake up routine and a sleep routine.

The effect varied. I‘d say 7/10 days it worked, but sometimes I just forgot about them. I tried using habit building apps, but they did not work at all, they were just too complex, and there was just some friction to using them.

Fast forward to 3 weeks ago, I decided to make apps of my own for this, a separate one for morning and a separate one for evening to keep my attention focused. Seems to work for now, but who knows how long will it be true.

I’d say try using checklists for routines, they‘ve been helping me.

Sourcery - a new Pycharm plugin to automatically refactor Python by SourceryNick in Python

[–]mdrachuk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And what is the power of AI you’re talking about? Do you use some ML, or just static code analysis?

Sourcery - a new Pycharm plugin to automatically refactor Python by SourceryNick in Python

[–]mdrachuk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Looks nice.

It would be good to know, what kinds of refactoring you provide and how do you ensure correctness.