![](https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/15c9c78d-2924-41e6-b392-0dc0657ff24e.jpeg)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/c47230a8-134c-4dc9-89e8-75c6ea875d36.png)
Looking back at history, it would lead to more propaganda and more support for going to war.
A population getting attacked only leads to that population wanting to an us vs them mentality and emotional knee-jerk reactions over rational responses.
Looking back at history, it would lead to more propaganda and more support for going to war.
A population getting attacked only leads to that population wanting to an us vs them mentality and emotional knee-jerk reactions over rational responses.
Better to ask a rubber duck than an LLM.
It has better results, is cheaper, and makes has a positive compounding effect on your own abilities.
At least it was better than the developer survey that was only about AI. That one still makes me facepalm just thinking about it.
Because: “The dose makes the poison”.
In other words, any chemical—even water and oxygen—can be toxic if too much is ingested or absorbed into the body. The toxicity of a specific substance depends on a variety of factors, including how much of the substance a person is exposed to, how they are exposed, and for how long.
Asking just because I’m curious… why are you using xpath?
Also, is this for a website you control or for some else’s website?
If you’re rendering the page (in a browser, e2e test-runner, spider bot, etc…), have you considered running some js on the page to get the image? Something like: const imagePath = document.getElementById('exampleIdOnElement').style.backgroundImage
Shouldn’t you have an adblocker to block those scripts?
Lol, well I could change it, but it was based on the gif at https://quietkit.com/box-breathing/
I think it’s because you’re not supposed to expand your lungs so much that they feel like they’re going to burst.
But if you scroll to the bottom of the css and look at line 69, you can change transform: scale(90%);
to transform: scale(100%);
to see if you like it better.
Are you using the group policy editor?
Why would I leave windows if Linux isn’t offering anything better?
Because Linux offers an ad-free experience, whereas Windows offers a free ads experience.
I’m not seeing anything in the data collected that I wouldn’t want to be sent if the app crashed.
Presenting: an excerpt from my lua windows management script:
-- Exists because lua doesn't have a round function. WAT?!
function round(num)
return math.floor(num + 0.5)
end
Yeah, not a fan.
It seemed pretty clear to me that the article states that css is doing it’s job and it’s actually fonts that are the problem
The windows 11 teams runs better, but if you’re using a school or work account, you need to use the old AngularJS+Electron version, or the new React+Webview2 version.
So for the time being, the Windows 11 teams is more catered for personal use only. It’s kind of like a modern reboot of Microsoft’s old MSN Messenger. It was included in Windows 11 (rebranded as “Chat”) but it’s been unbundled from Windows 11 installs and I think rebranded again. But not having the school/work account support means not a lot of people use it.
The transition between the AngularJS+Electron version and the React+Webview2 versions is happening now. At some point soon, anyone who is running an OS too old to run the new teams will be forced to use the browser version.
So after their transition, we’ll have to wait and see if they add the school/work account support to the native version because everyone using teams right now only uses those accounts.
CSS can already be split into multiple files though.
So why not just use CSS?
CSS has variables, modules and nesting.
By inheritance, do you mean the extends
keyword? Because if so, it just seems like going further down the misguided BEM path instead of picking better selectors.
Let me reverse that question and ask: Why use Sass?
There’s a reason Teams is/was shit.
The first teams was written in AngularJS (which is a slow to run resource hog, but fast to develop) wrapped in Electron. It was kind of a minimum viable product, just to build something quickly to get some feedback and stats on what people needed.
The plan was to build a new native version of teams and build it into the next windows while having an web fallback (built on react) for everyone else.
They stopped working on the original teams and started working on the new versions.
They got half-way through working on the native and react versions when suddenly, covid happened.
They couldn’t keep working on the new versions because they wouldn’t be ready for a while, so they had to go back and resume development on the old one, introducing patch after patch to quickly get more features in there (like more than 2 webcam streams per call).
Eventually covid subsided and they were able to resume development on the new teams versions.
Windows 11 launched with a native teams version (which has less features but runs super quick), and the new react based teams (which can now be downloaded in a webview2 wrapper) has been in open beta since late last year (if you’ve seen the “Try the new Teams” toggle, then you’ve seen this). The React+Webview2 teams will replace the AngularJS+Electron version as the default on July 7th.
Tailwind is only feels like a successor to CSS to developers writing css like it was 10 years ago (or using frameworks that write it like that, e.g. bootstrap), or projects not using visual regression testing.
Modern css is so much better.
:has()
, +
, ~
, nth-...
, … selectors.If you’re using something like BEM, or bootstrap to make columns, your knowledge is way out of date and you’re doing it wrong.
There’s a whole bunch of pull requests and issues sitting there for a start.
Personally I’d also update the example in the readme and set an engine value in the package.json file.