I mean yeah, but why? Like what did you like about it?
Walnut356
If they had made the deck more powerful, the old ones would suddenly have been obsolete.
I'm pretty sure it has more to do with current chip technology not actually changing that much in the, what, 2 years since the deck first released?
Also obsolete is a pretty strong word for what - if it had stronger internals - would likely end up being more expensive than current models.
To be fair, "an entire x" does have markedly different connotation than "x". The emphasis is that it's, well, the entirety of x. It's the difference between "i ate the cereal" and "i ate all the cereal".
Claymore (the end was kinda mid)
Genuinely curious - why do you like it? I see this at the top anime of all time. I watched it a few years ago and i thought it was absolutely horrible. Like 2 or 3 out of 10.
I feel like the only reason i can see is "the main character is a bad guy" but that doesnt excuse trope-y terrible writing, flat characters, and mid-2000's animation that aged horribly. Am i missing something?
Make them optional lmao. I dont have a 4k screen, havent ever had one, and wont buy one for a very long time. Why am i storing these assets i will never use?
Honestly, it's because a bunch of programs i used disappointed me (performance, functionality, [being a web app at all], etc.) and i figured it couldnt be that hard to do it better. In some cases i was right, in most i was wrong. As it turns out though, I really like programming so i guess i'm stuck here
I mean to be fair, those errors arent really meant for you (the end user) in the first place.
I’m not sure I understand your point about fall through having to be explicit
As far as i understand it, every switch statement requires a break
otherwise it's a compiler error - which makes sense from the "fallthrough is a footgun" C perspective. But fallthrough isnt the implicit behavior in C# like it is in C - the absence of a break
wouldnt fall through, even if it wasnt a compiler error. Fallthrough only happens when you explicitly use goto
.
But break
is what you want 99% of the time, and fallthrough is explicit. So why does break
also need to be explicit? Why isnt it just the default behavior when there's nothing at the end of the case?
It's like saying "my hammer that's on fire isnt safe, so you're required to wear oven mitts when hammering" instead of just... producing a hammer that's not on fire.
From what i saw on the internet, the justification (from MS) was literally "c programmers will be confused if they dont have to put breaks at the end".
the ergonomics expected of modern languages.
As someone learning c# right now, can we get some of those "modern ergonomics" for switch statements 💀
I cant believe it works the way it does. "Fallthrough logic is a dumb footgun, so those have to be explicit rather than the default. But C programmers might get confused somehow, so break has to be explicit too"
I miss fallthrough logic in languages that dont have it, and the "goto case" feature is really sick but like... Cmon, there's clearly a correct way here and it isnt "there is no default behavior"
Generators probably. It's the one thing i genuinely miss about python when i work in rust.
Ick. At the very least, i've seen it a LOT less in VSC. The fact that something as simple as rainbow brackets uses the freemium model in intellij sucks. I mean the fact that it's not a builtin setting is dumb too but that's beside the point
For sure, but as long as clickbait works they'll keep doing it.