

I’m afraid I may lose the majestic veranda that I once made that nobody can access but that I may want some day.
Can’t risk it, so it stays.
Compulsive comment editor in good faith.
#Sorry not sorry for the edit


I’m afraid I may lose the majestic veranda that I once made that nobody can access but that I may want some day.
Can’t risk it, so it stays.


deleted by creator
Android folks generally know because we have to close them sometimes. Don’t know about iPhoners
Simple answer for us simple folk. I like it. Thank you!


I’ve used it before for a job application! I needed to send them sensitive data. Tysm!
Great intuitive UI, does what it says, and it’s fast. 5/5


Kids these days want everything digital. Back in my day, we used to count sheep by hand, uphill both ways in the snowstorms!


It gets quite silly when you blame the entire dev community for supposedly downvoting you over ideals rather than being overly strict about them. I also prefer HTML-first and think it should be the norm, but I draw the line somewhere reasonable.
I can’t get to that page, so I asked a question
Yeah, and you can run the innocuous JS or figure out what it is from the URL. You’re tying your own hands while dishing it out to everyone else.


Not idol worship, rather, it’s silly to complain about JS when tools like NoScript allow you to selectively choose what runs instead of guessing what it is. It’s simply a documentation page like it says on the URL. I mean, they’re incredibly tame on the danger scale to leave your guard all the way up and instead take a jab at the entire community that had nothing to do with your personal choices.
In the language Gulf of Mexico
HUH?
Some languages start arrays at 0, which can be unintuitive for beginners. Some languages start arrays at 1, which isn’t representative of how the code actually works. Gulf of Mexico does the best of both worlds: Arrays start at -1.
Oh, I see they’re serious! Time to ditch JavaScript.


DNS being a couple of toothpicks is hilarious.
It’s maaagic. So much so that sometimes we don’t know wtf it’s doing.
Sure, but those are people who hate JavaScript for the sake of it. The rational ones hate it for its inconsistencies because the one thing JS gets right is its syntax.
And that improves readability, how?
By being used to it. As many have said, if you’re familiar with the syntax you have no problem parsing this.
Same here. Also, this syntax is common in modem JavaScript, I don’t get the hate.


I will never not grin slightly at the name XMPP.
“Sí más más!” sounds dirty.


The water I would’ve needed to chug from the effort to close it myself. 😌 /s


Witch!
Burn them!
It’s supporting this other curious structure.