Just rereading that one now. It’s been decades since I first read them all, and it’s fab to get back into that universe :)
If you read the article, both points are addressed.
I’m not from the US, and have heard of thatch in relation to hair. But not “Swedish fish”—also a US thing…
Was it the one about ears?
Have you seen For All Mankind?
Forgot “Because you know it’s your round, but someone else is drunk enough to think it’s theirs”
real writers use the hyphen - like this - instead because they can’t be bothered to type an actual em dash
I think you defined lazy writers, not real writers.
I hope you include use of the en-dash too. I use them 2–3 times a week.
And how is the rabbit doing?
Is that why bees can’t wear contact lenses?
Yup–a sarnie shop in a Spa town. See what they’ve done there…
Quit whining or they’ll notice, fix the bug, and then we’ll have that shit all night too.
I’m sure I remember a similar story about someone very excited to get a response each night, and eventually they followed the return call, it got louder and louder, and eventually they saw some other idiot hooting like an owl through the trees.
Yeah, we already have all those things apart from futuristic technology. But the boffins promise it’s less than 5 years away now.
It hasn’t crashed for me yet but it’s flaky as anything. The most annoying part is getting notifications on mobile for messages you send yourself from desktop.
(Guessing JS / TS) I look after a moderately sized app, and still find console.log()
useful sometimes. They are all protected by a Boolean, so we have authLog && console.log('something about auth')
and the bools are all set in one global file. So turning debug logging on and off is very simple.
The best thing is that when it’s off, the bundler strips all the console log lines from the source, so they’re not even there-but-inactive in production.
Not yet…