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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 19th, 2023

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  • This doesn’t seem overly useful.

    It’s a list taken out of a bunch of books with no regard for how something can be the best path in one language and a smell in another language.

    Look at this page for example: https://luzkan.github.io/smells/imperative-loops

    It suggests using functional loop methods (.map(), .reduce(), .filter()) instead of using imperative loops (for, for in, for each) but completely disregards the facts that imperative loops also have access to the break, continue, and return keywords to improve performance.

    For example: If I have an unsorted list of 1000 cars which includes a whole bunch of information per car (e.g. color, year manufactured, etc…), and I want to know if there were any cars were manufactured before the year 1980, I can run an imperative loop through the list and early return true if I find one, and only returning false if I haven’t found one by the end of the list.

    If the third car was made in 1977, then I have only iterated through 3 cars to find my answer.

    But if I were to try this with only functional loops, I would have to iterate through all 1000 cars before I had my answer.

    A website with blind rules like this is going to lead to worse code.







  • I’m under the impression that there’s two reasons we don’t have it in chromium yet:

    1. Google initially ignored jpeg-xl but then everyone jumped on it and now they feel they have to create a post-hoc justification for not supporting it earlier which is tricky and now they have a sunk cost situation to keep ignoring it
    2. Google today was burnt by the webp vulnerability which happened because there was only one decoder library and now they’re waiting for more jpeg-xl libraries which have optimizations (which rules out reference implementations), good support (which rules out libraries by single authors), have proven battle-hardening (which will only happen over time) and are written safely to avoid another webp style vulnerability.

    Google already wrote the wuffs language which is specifically designed to handle formats in a fast and safe way but it looks like it only has one dedicated maintainer which means it’s still stuck on a bus factor of 1.

    Honestly, Google or Microsoft should just make a team to work on a jpg-xl library in wuffs while adobe should make a team to work on a jpg-xl library in rust/zig.

    That way everyone will be happy, we will have two solid implementations, and they’ll both be made focussing on their own features/extensions first so we’ll all have a choice among libraries for different needs (e.g. browser lib focusing on fast decode, creative suite lib for optimised encode).







  • What specifically do you think is legacy in that comparison? The coloring? The horizontal layout? The whitespace?

    Note: I’ve changed the first link from https://github.com/cxli233/FriendsDontLetFriends/network to https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/network. Still the same view, but just a different repo to highlight the problems

    1. It’s in a small non-responsive box
    2. Ridiculous spacing
    • If you want to see the commit messages, you either need to hover over a dot which increases visual scanning durations or you need to go to the commits view which only shows the commits on a single branch
    1. It doesn’t show commit messages
    2. It’s scrolling horizontally
    3. Branches cannot be collapsed
    4. Branches cannot be hidden/ignored
    5. No way to search for commits
    6. No way to select multiple commits
    • Which also means no way to diff any specific commits together
    • And there’s also no way to perform an action over a range of commits
    • And there’s also no way to start a merge/merge-request/pull-request/etc… between two commits
    1. No way to sort by date/topologically
    2. Keyboard controls only moves view instead of selecting commits

    I’ll stop here at 10 reasons (or more if you count the dot points), otherwise I’ll be here all day.


    The network view lays out forks and their branches, not only [local]/[local+1-remote] branches.

    Yes, but the others can do that while still being usable.

    I don’t know what IDE that miro screenshot is from. […]

    It’s gitkraken

    […] But I see it as wasteful and confusing. The author initials are useless and wasteful, picking away focus. The branch labels are far off from the branch heads. […]

    The picture doesn’t do it justice, it’s not a picture, it’s an interactive view.

    You can resize things, show/hide columns, filter values in columns to only show commits with certain info (e.g. Ignore all dependabot commits), etc… Here’s an example video.

    […]The coloring seems confusing.

    You can customise all that if you want.