It totally depends on the company. But if pull something like burnout, you should be careful to cover your story why you were not able to relax properly.
This is such a great initiative. I lived on a busy crossroad for a few years. I went from thinking motorbikes were pretty cool to having a passionate disdain for the sad little selfish men that ride insanely loud bikes around the city. the constant noise from motorbikes was so so bad. bikes in the countryside are probably just about ok but in the city it's just selfish and embarassing
totally agree, for me golang is a strongly imperative language and that's ok. I'm willing to be proved wrong, but I would imagine if you want to do functional programming it's going to be a lot easier to just use a different language.
I'm biased because I've built a career on Go at this point but the pragmatism and ability to just get things done in Go without faffing about with unnecessary abstractions is I think one of the strongest practical demonstrations of how incredible an imperative language can be, and for me personally at least, no FP language will ever beat the productivity that I can achieve with Go, especially because at least in my problem domain the real world problems always have enough corner cases that FP wouldn't even be useful.
In Go I just systematically eliminate and handle each possible step and state, in a straightforward way, directly deal with the business logic, and then it's done and it works predictably and efficiently for years. Interfaces really are a sufficient form of polymorphism, too.
wow 17! excellent work. You're going places for sure if you keep this up. I would guess even most working Devs don't have any real concept of how things work at the CPU level let alone during high school.
If some part of your day involves 40min walk, we wouldn't comsider that a "walkable" city in the US. Is that a common commute walk elsewhere? With temperatures as they are now in the southern US and southern EU, I think it could quite realistically kill people.
40 minutes is not a particularly long walk for us in Europe (as a Brit I can still say that right?). Though if I was doing it every day for work I'd probably buy a bicycle!
you have no idea what you're talking about and your comment is just patronising. MMA is a highly technical sport that demands elite levels of athleticism and sporting intelligence. fight fans are also already a highly diverse group from all around the world and that group is continually growing in size and diversity
I never was attracted to the sport and maybe even had some unconscious biases towards fighters, but about a year ago my meditation practice brought me to try and confront the fear and aversion I had towards aggression. Long story short, I've been training Muay Thai for about a year and it totally changed my view on things. Everyone I've met at these gyms has been kind, welcoming, and exceptionally thoughtful. Training anything this difficult has a way of cutting down your ego. I only wish I had started 10 years ago.
Maybe the fans are different, who knows, but the people that actually show up and train I'd absolutely take as a friend or direct report. It's deep internal mind/body training.
grow up. This is such a moronic comment and I hope at some point in the future you reach a level of maturity in your life where you'll understand why it is. someone opens up with a touching and personal story and you nitpick them with a trivial detail for no gain
I think the parent comment was misinterpreted, it sounds like they are highlighting that gabapentin is related to the neurotransmitter GABA (indeed it is a structural analogue). GABAergic drugs (benzos, alcohol) are notorious for causing horrendous and potentially lethal withdrawals.
To me, that comment reads as though it's in agreement with the GP post, although it could probably have benefited from some context for the vast majority of people who are unfamiliar with the nature of neurotransmitters.
I live in Berlin and use the official BVG app for using the public transport here. it bugs out temporarily fairly regularly and I have to make the decision whether to buy a paper ticket to cover me (incurring extra expense) while the app isn't working or to risk it and hope the ticket inspector doesn't stop me/shows me leniency when I demonstrate the non-functioning app. extremely annoying