maor

joined 2 years ago
[–] maor@lemmy.org.il 1 points 1 year ago

Oh thanks for the heads up, I should've read it more carefully :P

 

I recently stumbled upon a problem: I wanted the stdout of a command task to be printed after execution, so I toggled the global -v flag. However, the service module is apparently verbose as shit and printed like a 100 lines and uhh.... that's a costly tradeoff O_o

Seems like a PR for a task-level verbosity keyword has been proposed, yet rejected.

I'm aware it's possible to just register the stdout of the command and print it in a following debug task, but I wonder if there's a prettier solution.

How would you go about this? Ever encountered such a feeling?

[–] maor@lemmy.org.il 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Based in Israel, don't get anything. This is standard as our contacts usually specify that a third of our salary is legally considered compensation for overtime.

There's no defined schedule, it's mostly "whoever is available will take care of the incident, and if multiple people are available then they should join too". It will obviously not go smoothly if you're never available. This is terrible, I wonder if there are any other places that behave like this.

It should be noted that this isn't weird considered the working hours are quite bad compared to the OECD, not terrible though.

[–] maor@lemmy.org.il 4 points 1 year ago

Me with every post here

[–] maor@lemmy.org.il 6 points 1 year ago

Kindest shitjustworks user

[–] maor@lemmy.org.il 1 points 1 year ago

I'd be scared to perform POST/PUT with LLM-generated commands. For immutable calls I agree though

[–] maor@lemmy.org.il 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Terrible choice of name

[–] maor@lemmy.org.il 5 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I guess they were referring to formatting other than tabs, like place of brackets and line length, which sounds like a neat idea

[–] maor@lemmy.org.il 7 points 1 year ago

He's literally me that's why I posted. Commenters won't get it

 
[–] maor@lemmy.org.il 3 points 2 years ago

I'm using both of them:) zoxide comes with a zi command which lets you search through your recent directories

 

Saw the post here regarding CentOS's off-springs and a couple of people brought up the excellent point of: why play with fire? Let's just stick to Debian.

The only disadvantage I currently see is the outdated packages, and I'm curious whether makedeb solves them. Does anyone here use it regularly? How stable and comfortable is it? Did you write your own PKGBUILDs?

[–] maor@lemmy.org.il 1 points 2 years ago

Yep, it's more of a reference. I like the argparse tutorial and would love to see more docs of this kind though

[–] maor@lemmy.org.il 15 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (3 children)

I feel the same and I've been using Python for years professionally. It's the lack of examples for me; usually functions and classes aren't meant to be used as-is but rather fed as an argument into some other function or class, and this info is seldom portrayed in the func's documentation. E.g. the documentation of BaseHTTPRequestHandler is one that I trip over every single time, I have to resort to reading the source code of SimpleHTTPRequestHandler to remember how handlers are supposed to be defined 🐺

[–] maor@lemmy.org.il 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Nah I thought the same but then I manually checked it. In most of the image posts I see, the image URL starts with lemmy.org.il, which made me wonder whether they're actually downloaded or it's some kind of whacky proxy. So I downloaded some of these pics and looked for files of identical size and hash digest, and indeed they were on my disk!

It's not a bad decision to cache pics, because it does make the experience really smooth, and I'm not complaining about it. Mastodon does this as well

 

One of my fav Python writeups. I love Python and luckily I get to dictate how it's being written in my job, so I'm forcing types down the through of my colleagues. Saved a bunch of debugging time, so I can waste more time on Lemmy while still getting paid. Good shit

 

My pictrs volume got quite huge and I wanna delete pics cached from other instances. The thing is I'm not sure which pics are from my instance and which aren't, because they all have cryptic filenames. Anyone knows of a way to differentiate?

 
$ cd lemmy-dir
$ du -sh *
456K    lemmy-ui
15G     pictrs
4.3G    postgres

Guys this is no longer funny please I feel literally chased by the "no space left" message. Please help I don't need those pics I did not upload them

 

Y'all should try it! I loved seeing it popping on other instances' /instances page, and seeing it polling other communities. Also changing the background in my theme was lit.

Lemmy's hosting documentation is a bit rough around the edges, especially the ARM situation (and its contemporary solution), so I had some extra tinkering to do. No shade at all yeah? I appreciate every bit of their work and I jotted down some points that I need to consolidate into a documentation PR soon.

Anyway, I feel like the extra @... on our usernames should be worn as a badge of honor you feel me? ;)

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