Biggest fear as a new parent is basically this. What if my ideals estrange my kid? They’re not bad ideals, but the kid might just not be wired for them. Working hard, doing good for others, building skills, all of that.
I wonder what this guy’s parents were seeing, what they were going through. From what I’ve seen from parents going through it, it can be really super challenging to handle a hyperactive child while still being, you know, an imperfect person yourself
The biggest win we had as parents, I think, is always explaining why we had each rule and expectation. We’re not doing this because we don’t want you to have fun. We’re doing this for these specific reasons that benefit you.
Now that are kids are older and out of the house, they voluntarily follow pretty close to our teachings, largely because they saw friends do the opposite and experience the bad consequences we foretold. “Huh, Dad was right: staying up too late and sleeping through a work alarm really does make bosses cranky.” They’ve each thanked us for taking the time to teach why things are important instead of just laying down inscrutable laws. I know I hated that as a kid.
Well. I guess the demo doesn’t work for react components even when prompted for them? Overall the output seemed best for static demo showcasing, it was all HTML
The reason is that the mobile version doesn't include all the tools available in the desktop version. The mobile version is more of a 'light' or 'shortened' version, offering fewer features for a more streamlined experience.
> There are also boilerplate repos out there to get started.
Should be unnecessary (and might be outdated unless meticulously maintained) IF one chooses to just follow the VSC API docs' `yo code` approach. Which generates the project structure with a simple hello `extension.ts` IIRC.
The real trick here is dodging ASTs, which, after trying to use in so many parse-the-code projects, really aren’t needed all the time but are put pretty highly on the pedestal
The Austin tech culture is…interesting. I stopped trying to find a job here and went remote Bay Area, and talking to tech workers in the area gave me the impression it’s a mix of slacker culture and hype chasing. After moving back here, tech talent seems like a game of telephone, and we’re several jumps past the original.
When I heard CrowdStrike was here, it just kinda made sense
Yup. Common. With all the performance blogs focused on time to first paint and the like, React introduced a whole new category that looks a lot like this