David Zaslavsky

Software engineer, former particle physicist, occasional blogger. I support the principle of cake.

Posting habits: ~60% #Monsterdon, ~20% #Python/#tech, ~20% funny/uplifting/entertaining content. Rare politics-related posts, always using popular hashtags so they can be filtered out. I typically don’t boost posts with images unless they have #AltText.

#books #bookstodon #reading #scifi #fantasy #programming #C #CPlusPlus #Linux #Git #KDE #bash #fedi22

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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: November 27th, 2022

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  • @Feeee23 Cool, well, I’m not the greatest expert on Sanderson’s works but I think you could either go on to read the rest of the Mistborn series (books 4-7), which is what I did, or if you’re interested in his epic series, The Stormlight Archive, you could start that after book 3 of Mistborn and then roughly interleave books of Mistborn and Stormlight, which I think I would have slightly preferred in retrospect. If you take the latter approach, I definitely recommend finishing Mistborn books 4-7 before starting book 5 of The Stormlight Archive, because that book references some things introduced in Mistborn. (Even book 4 of Stormlight obliquely mentions a couple things from Mistborn, but that’s not quite so important.)

    And no pressure to follow back BTW - I mean, of course you can if you want to, but it’s not expected. 🙂












  • @Pantherina “I mean notes should have bold headers, not hashtags.” OK, but that reflects what *you* want from a notes app, not what everyone wants. And of course that’s totally fine, you can get that from a notes app that has WYSIWYG formatting if you find that it works for you. But I would suggest that it doesn’t make sense for you to enter a discussion about a Markdown notes app and tell a bunch of people, for many of whom that app probably works pretty well, that they’re making a bad choice to use it because it doesn’t offer the behavior you want.

    For what it’s worth, I think a lot of people use Markdown notes apps in a way that you might not be considering. Like, this separation between writing and viewing that you’re talking about simply doesn’t exist in my note-taking workflow. I usually just read the raw markup, possibly with some minimal formatting added on by whatever app I’m using.




  • @Fleppensteijn @Max_P The change in the first component of the version number from 5 to 6 is what could have tipped you off. I mean, admittedly there’s no universal standard for software versioning that everyone follows, but the closest thing there is to a commonly adopted standard (https://semver.org/) says that when the first component of the version number changes, it’s a big deal and things might break. (Or, a relatively big deal, but just how big that is in practice depends on the package.) If you didn’t know to look out for that, now you do. 😀

    Unless by “average user” you mean someone who relies on automatic updates and doesn’t look at what’s getting installed. Which is fine, but if you’re allowing automatic updates, you have to understand you’re giving up the ability to catch stuff like this before it happens. (This situation could certainly be improved, but generally that’s the state of things right now.)