Meme Monday!
Today's cover image comes from last week's thread.
DEV is an inclusive space! Humor in poor taste will be downvoted by mods.
Meme Monday!
Today's cover image comes from last week's thread.
DEV is an inclusive space! Humor in poor taste will be downvoted by mods.
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
This week's comiCSS is not about CSS or web development 😳
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I hate when it gives me more code than I gaurgored for. Especially when it's code solve code. 😠
I hate when they put the screen on the wrong side of my monitor.
Ah yes, monitor facing away from myself, the usual way I sit at my desk.
I gaurgored my sandwich this morning
Same
As a side note, what exactly is happening with the title of this post? “Monday Monday”?
(Is fixed now)
Maybe it's just deep referential meta humor — or just a typo. We'll never know.
😂
This one is so full of errors that I can't even count hahaha
I love this monitor. It won't distract you from looking at bad code.
Honest statement.
OK, Copilot, calm down…
Oh, a happy ending!
I don't know what we should do about the code that caused it, though. 🤔
I just watched this episode last night. Now I finally get the the reference lol
You'd think after DECADES of people wasting their time trying to do this one task, browser vendors would get a clue that everyone wants to be able to do this as easily as possible and just make it happen.
Instead, we get useless UI redesigns, features literally no one asked for, Manifest v3, and new bugs.
FWIW, the fact that vendors generally don't diverge from the spec, and that the spec doesn't change quickly, are both very good for the web and those who work on it. Flexbox has been in the spec for over a decade:
Try telling your family that.
I am perfectly capable of both complaining about bugs in software I've written AND complaining about bugs in software I didn't write.
Except those people that follow a couple of tutorials on youtube on how to make a todo list, and then complain about the low level of developers that wrote any kind of software because it's just easy to fix all those bugs...
Learning to code it's not enough, no, not at all, you have to code professionally for a couples of years, follow some projects, and then you find out where all those bugs come from, and why nobody seems able to fix it.
Doesn't matter how good you are at coding, doesn't matter how smart yuou are: you're almost never write a software product or service alone, and when you set up a team, things changes and became more complicated....
I think it's a case of the ability to know with smug satisfaction that someone else in a completely different industry but still a coder, is having a worse day than you! ha ha!!
That's exactly the opposite for me actually, as I started to understand all those issues and the fact that they are easily solvable with proper prioritization 😅
43 warnings is nothing. Call me when you've got a few thousand and half of them are "deprecation warnings."
When you ask AI to write your Meme Monday post for you:
Monday Monday
Or she'll tell you to submit 50 pull requests.
As someone whipper snapper once said while I was fixing a problem on the fly in a P1 screen share, "How can you use that vi thing?! It's such stupid app 'cos none of the commands make any sense.".
15 years of *nix admin work at that point and I was livid. In front of 10 people at 2am on the call, "It's not an 'app' you little moron, some of us still call them programs. Secondly me and this 'sh*tty app' are saving you and your ass from whopping by management tomorrow. So show some respect and shut the hell up!", some sniggering on the call and it all went very quiet! haha!
Monday Monday? Less meme-y than previous weeks?
Lol fixed
XD a very Monday typo
Very much the case even in some very large VC funded companies. Most things are a wrapper, sadly. It's got me a little jaded to be fair, at least in the consumer side of things.
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