I love how in Garuda linux, the same command as sudo apt update;sudo apt upgrade is just yay. Like "Yay, I'm upgrading my system!" Makes me happy when I run it even though it is a bit like pulling a slot machine lever for if it's going to break something in my system. My plasmashell environment only recently got fixed. It was crashing like crazy for about 2 weeks.
What are you on about? I've done potato truck driving for a season when I was depressed and needed something else to do for a while. There's a lot of low/no skill work on farms that people can do. With just a few people who know what they're doing (and I definitely wasn't in that camp), the crops aren't going to be burning in the field. I don't think anyone is advocating grabbing people, plopping them in a field and saying "here, farm this".
This is a good opportunity to plug Ian's Shoelace Site. I used to have some winter boots that had slippery laces and they would come undone all the time. But Ian has a Secure Knot which only takes a bit of extra time to learn, but is so secure AND comes undone easily by simply pulling on both loose ends at the same time. Pulling on only one loose end doesn't unravel the knot. I feel like it should be mandatory for runners to learn this knot.
Mormons have their own book which is basically fan-fic of the bible and new testament. So it's kinda like if you met someone who calls themselves a Trekkie, but they've never seen any of the shows and have only read fan-fic. Would a Trekkie accept them as one of their own?
I'm excited for you! There an entire TV Trope named because of Season 2 called Growing the Beard which is the opposite of Jumping the Shark. It's where a show really finds their stride. So if you made it through Season 1, you should be in for a good time!
I was looking to see if there are equivalents to Java's private and protected members, and it looks like Python's answer to that is just throw one or two underscores in front of things to do that. And it doesn't really do anything, more of just a naming convention. To me that feels like a basic OO structure that is shoehorned into Python.
You're right in that OOP feels very shoehorned in with Python. But not every project has a Linus Torvalds to publicly humiliate horrible ideas and implementations.
Write a new method, make sure to reference self first. Write a new method, make sure to reference self first. Call the method, make sure to reference self first.
A5: =COPILOT("THANKS!")
Nuclear power: intensifies.