• @DominatorX1@thelemmy.club
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    132 days ago

    My cycle goes : think think think, draw, think, draw, think, write code for a day or 3.

    I use an ide or a text editor. never use that other stuff.

  • Rhaedas
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    2163 days ago

    no Google

    I do not believe you.

    Arch Linux

    Okay, fine. A rare sighting.

    • Victor
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      873 days ago

      There are dozens of us. And we are used to reading manuals, since we first installed our system.

      • Rhaedas
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        433 days ago

        I was there. I was one of them. I just chose to use tools to make my life easier. Call me a sell out, I guess.

        • @DonutsRMeh@lemmy.world
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          243 days ago

          Nope, not a sell out. Just a person using the tools at hand. You can’t just live in the past. You did it without Google back then because there was no Google and you had to use what you had to use. Now you use Google, because again, you have to use what you have to use. In the end, I personally only care about the outcome.

          I just chose to use tools to make my life easier

          If you don’t then I’d call you stupid. Keep doing that, friend. That’s the best way actually. You want your life easier so you can put out great work.

          • Maeve
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            53 days ago

            Google went live in 98? First Arch in 02?

            • @DonutsRMeh@lemmy.world
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              153 days ago

              I’m talking about developers in general before even Linux was a thing. I thought that was obvious in my comment. Guess not, I need to work more on my English.

              • Maeve
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                123 days ago

                Your English is fine. The same words often evoke different mental images from one person to another. Sometimes I have trouble distinguishing when to embrace literal meanings and when to go with the general gist of words. Thanks for addressing my comment, a gentle reminder for me.

              • Rhaedas
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                63 days ago

                I understood your point fine. I indeed started out with first Commodore BASIC and then into 6502, all using the manuals because there wasn’t much else of a source back then.

                • @DonutsRMeh@lemmy.world
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                  33 days ago

                  Thank you, kindly. I’ve heard that manuals where fun to use (sarcasm). Unfortunately, I am old enough to remember those days, but wasn’t fortunate enough to own or even be able to witness such gems in real life.

      • Rhaedas
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        53 days ago

        Yeah, otherwise it would have been very hard before they came into being.

          • @JargonWagon@lemmy.world
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            22 days ago

            My favorite thing about StumbleUpon was basically opening me up to a whole Internet without touching Google, and it showed me so many fun things. RIP.

            Jumpstick.app comes pretty close though.

    • @urandom@lemmy.world
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      143 days ago

      I remember using man pages when I was contributing to a C open source project back in the day.

    • Billegh
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      103 days ago

      But he went out of his way to install man pages on arch? Probably a narc.

  • @otacon239@lemmy.world
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    933 days ago

    Yay! Cencorship! I spent an extra 3 seconds focusing on the word psychopath trying to figure out what went wrong instead of reading it like a normal word. Isn’t that so much better than offending an algorithm with the letter ‘h’?

  • @sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    Is this supposed to be a joke or have we truly gotten to the point where … coding in a terminal via like hyprland or w/e, without relying on an what is basically an annoying tutorial character from a video game that acts as an assistant…

    This is psycopathy?

    Having actual competence in one’s field?

    Oh god we’re all doomed, they’ll soon be alternating between worshipping us demigods, or burning us at the stake.

    EDIT:

    Welp, I’m sure thats a good sign, lol.

  • @maxprime@lemmy.ml
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    273 days ago

    Yesterday I spent about 2 hours trying to get ChatGPT to walk me through the install process of putting Arch on a 2011 MacBook Air. It just wouldn’t work and the further along we got the harder it seemed and I really thought that using AI was necessary. I finally gave up and read the Arch Wiki and had it installed in under 45 minutes.

    • @ballgoat@lemmy.zip
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      11 day ago

      That tracks. The AI push is extraordinarily premature. It makes sense that capitalist idiots see mass layoffs as improvement, but rational people do not.

    • @pigup@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      I tried reading the gadget bridge instructions for my watch. Could not get a straight answer on getting the authorization key (I’m a noob), wasted 2 hr. o3 gave me perfect instructions that got it done in 20 minutes. Ya win some ya lose some.

      • @maxprime@lemmy.ml
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        22 days ago

        Yeah. It is really good at some things and bad at other things. I used to have a good sense for it but the arch install threw me off.

        I find it’s good at giving regex commands from natural language and vise versa. It’s really helped me get a grip on that aspect of learning (neo)vim.

  • @axEl7fB5@lemmy.cafe
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    333 days ago

    I use:

    • DuckDuckGo
    • Neovim
    • rusty dusty IdeaPad
    • Arch NixOS btw

    I don’t read man pages but I read documentation.

    Am I also a psychopath?

    • @percent@infosec.pub
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      3 days ago

      I decided to try Cursor today (first time using any coding assistant) to refactor my sloppy NixOS config, and I’m really impressed to far. My config is so much cleaner and very well documented. It even has automated backups, a README.md, and CHANGELOG.md now!

      The cost has been ~$20 so far (I’m still tinkering with it).

      ETA: I also use Arch NixOS btw


      Edit 2: I asked it “how might I streamline my deployments a little?” It wrote some nicely polished scripts that use deploy-rs, and wrote some nice documentation for it.

      The script didn’t work on first run, so I added the console output to the context and asked “what went wrong here?” It debugged and fixed the script, and updated the docs.

      I think this has been the most frictionless NixOS experience I’ve had so far

    • @JamesBoeing737MAX@sopuli.xyz
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      33 days ago

      Oh god no, ideapads. My dad has one and the metal parts hardly fit together after a year, the key travel is 1mm and the touchpad is practically useless.

      • @axEl7fB5@lemmy.cafe
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        32 days ago

        I like the key travel though. The touchpad does get fucked quite easily after some usage so I decided to just use keyboard-only. I’ve been using mine for 4 years now.

        • @JamesBoeing737MAX@sopuli.xyz
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          2 days ago

          If I had to use it daily, I would kill myself, but if you’re fine with it, enjoy it. Of course it can’t beat thinkpads and my Dell latitude 5290 (the new latitudes are pretty much the same (edit:as the ideapad) and part whitelist on tp-s).

    • @jhdeval@lemmy.world
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      23 days ago

      I would not say that. I use a very old 13" Dell XPS laptop. I use Code-Server and duckduckgo. I have be known to program on my 7 year old android tablet with a bluetooth keyboard. For the most part I look at docs for JS modules as I write mostly in Python with Flask and use JS for responsiveness. Before anyone suggests something else I have to interface with a VERY old database that I wrote a webservice into through C#. I do realize there are other ways but python is my comfort point and the amount of backend processing makes it easier to use a “real” language. For my purposes it is plenty fast.

      • @axEl7fB5@lemmy.cafe
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        12 days ago

        JS for responsiveness.

        You do web development or something? Aren’t you supposed to use media queries?

        • @jhdeval@lemmy.world
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          12 days ago

          Only media queries I do are to raw images, avi files or raw audio files. Makes life some much easier when the standard is as old as the internet.

  • I still remember my Masters degree in distributed computing. C++ in vi (not even vim), monochromatic display, 36 computers working together to give me a bunch of SIGSEGV.

    • notabot
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      93 days ago

      The joys of distributed algorithms. You can now get more errors, more quickly than before!

      I remember writing a chat system in assembler, for DOS, using, IIRC, IPX networking. When it went wrong, one or more machines would just freeze, with the string “NETWORK ABEND” in the middle of the screen.

  • @shads@lemy.lol
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    203 days ago

    I was going to ask how he knew it was Arch, but I feel like that is just setting up the next comment.