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James A Lewis
9a4acdeb978565e27490dca65c83e9f65745eaec1d9a0405a52d198c1489913b
Husband, father, #Catholic #Christian, Amateur Philosopher, Bitcoiner, freedom lover, word nerd #dadstr

I think it's because men can better tell when they're being scammed. The cost is too high, and the upside to low. No one cares about degrees anymore, so lifelong debt is a really bad move.

Replying to Avatar CitizenPleb

Here you go!

1. "The" 2. "state" 3. "is" 4. "a"

5. "thief" 6. "and" 7. "the" 8. "government"

9. "can" 10. "go" 11. "hang" 12. "itself"

Imma be honest. Seeing "[some group] owned business" in advertisements is a 100% turn off except for only one: Christian/Catholic.

Everything else is asking for pity or trying to guilt me into buying or hiring, and it really helps me to immediately know with whom I do not want to do business.

Yes. I started creating an online learning app for myself and encoded the negative to mean things like "never set," "user deleted," "missing data," etc. I don't think think I've used more (or lesser? 🤷‍♂️) than -3 in my code, but nothing prevents my using the whole range of an i8 in rust while also having robust exception handling.

Does he have solid doors and curtains on the windows of his bedroom and restroom ? Or does he take his dumps and do the deed out in the street for all to see?

Oh! Of course! Rust itself doesn't have `null`, but I can totally make more falsy Options, and that would enable me to have a lot more control about exceptions, like "missing," (API doesn't know it should be there) "empty," (API failed to give a value) or actually `false` (API knew it should be there and set it to `false`) being different, usable cases.

That should be better code than my go-to of negative INTs to communicate a specific error type.

[learning Rust]

Something I am realizing right now is that if I am to start using Rust for my web apps, I am going to have to be pretty careful about JSON ingest, specifically handling `NULL`s and other ambiguous typing that comes with many APIs.

When I get JSON data and parse it, I need the data to be very well organized, properly typed, and predictable.

Q: For those who are Rust devs (especially those of you who use Yew+Wasm), when you receive JSON into your application do you usually parse first into a JSON struct/enum first to sanitize then construct your target or do you parse directly into your target strct/enum?

#askNostr #Rust #webDev

Just started learning Rust and Yew-Wasm web app development!

I'm excited to build really performant web apps, but I'm disappointed at the minimum size of a 'hello world' web app with Rust-originated Wasm.

My ultra-basic increment-decrement a counter is a 850kb-ish *.wasm. Why so heavy?

This is reason number 1754 why we need a system of money neither dependent upon nor controlled by a small bunch of incompetent fools "educated" in Keynesian economics, and reason number 835 that we need much smaller governments.

https://youtu.be/HUynEZ1dXLg?si=fFljqdR2ywILPNPA

Replying to Avatar James A Lewis

Legit one of the coolest toys ever! A simple system of plastic screws for cardboard that comes with a saw, punches, and drivers.

It's called Makedo, as in "make do" with what you have on hand: cardboard boxes, and too many of them.

nostr:nevent1qqsd28eme25v8aexmyu54ds29g365t3lzsdx42av9n7acqtynqlr55qpz4mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfduhsygy6ftx7h9u9vh38fyxu5ewg860k2az74mqangzqtffdrxxpfzv38vpsgqqqqsnsfmedfx

Not only does this make sense, but it is actually what the roots of the word would imply:

Com: with or alongside

Passio: (passion) to suffer, endure, or strive

When we say we have "passion" for something, what we ought to mean is that we are willing to suffer for it. I have passion for my wife and family, for the right ordering of our society, and for freedom.