Lemmy does have karma, it is stored in the DB, and the API returns it. It just isn’t displayed on the UI.
A little insane, but in a good way.
Lemmy does have karma, it is stored in the DB, and the API returns it. It just isn’t displayed on the UI.
someone watching you code in a google doc
I’ve had nightmares less terrifying than this
You can put spoilers in posts or comments this way:
::: spoiler Title
Secret
:::
Here is how it renders:
Secret
(AFAIK apps don’t render these correctly, only the website)
We should do an AmA with her!
Lemmy actually has a really good API. Moderation tools are pretty simple though.
Here people actually react to what I post and write. And they react to the best possible interpretation of what I wrote, not the worst. And even if we disagree, we can still have a nice conversation.
Does anyone have a good theory about why the threadiverse is so much friendlier? Is it only because it’s smaller? Is it because of the kind of people a new platform like this attracts? Because there is no karma? Maybe something else?
Did I miss something? Or is this still about Beehaw?
YAML is extremely complex for a configuration format and it has many really weird edge cases:
The problem is IMHO made worse because it looks so friendly at first glance.
Hungarian here. It is safe to drink without boiling. People only boil water for baby formula to be extra safe.
After all, they said we need quality content to attract new users
They got gregnant
Yeah, the situation seems pretty clear
I’m the author of that bot. It will have an opt-out option, I implemented it as soon as someone suggested it:
https://programming.dev/comment/305938
Don’t spread sensationalist lies.
Oh wow, I’ve just realized it was OP I talked to in the comments. I immediately replied to their suggestion. What a clown 🤡
This is excellent, enjoy your Lemmy Gold!
This is an excellent explanation of hashing, and the interactive animations make it very enjoyable and easy to follow.
I’m firmly in the print statement / console.log camp but this article convinced me to try using a debugger.
I absolutely agree. But:
Obviously as a Hungarian I have a soft spot for Hungarian notation :) But in these cases I think it’s warranted.
I understand what you mean, and I even agree with it, but just to be a little pedantic, variable names are code, or at least they are more code than comments or docs.
But yes, encoding units into the type system is a much better solution. It doesn’t work however for config options, environment variables or CLI switches.
If I remember correctly, the properties the API returns are
comment_score
andpost_score
.