By your logic it would be a positive for your code to have errors/warnings. And on the latter, that would appropriate if there was a test that determined if you are free from all known diseases (or at least those that it can detect).
By your logic it would be a positive for your code to have errors/warnings. And on the latter, that would appropriate if there was a test that determined if you are free from all known diseases (or at least those that it can detect).
That’s why I said false negative. The medical test is testing for the presence of a disease. So if they find the disease is considered a positive test (it found what it was looking for). For static analysis on code, its the opposite. Its testing if your code is free of issues that it can detect. If it finds no issues, then the test was positive. If does find issues, the test failed and each issue is a negative that contributed to the test failing.
Warnings and errors are negatives not positive. So if it generates a warning that is OK, it’s a false negative.
My experience is exactly the opposite. I don’t work for a FAANG but I’ve been around the block a bit. Its always the junior devs that try and add new warnings etc to the code base. I always require warnings to be cleaned up even if that means disabling specific instances (but not the whole rule) because the rule is flagging a false negative.
You’re better off.
Next time buy her a large 1 topping and pick it up for $7.99.
I had an issue years ago with a tv and a dvd player. For whatever reason, whenever the dvd player was connected, the tv would blank out every few seconds. At some point I posted on the tv manufacturer forums. I did eventually figured out that I leave a thumb drive connected to the tv, the problem disappeared. I wanted to let people know about my work around. I got 1 result – the forum post I had made quite a while back.
I’m pretty sure it was an HDCP issue.
I was totally expecting a shitty morph in that novel.
searching for “openjdk download” has Adoptium.net in the first 5 results.
Why would anyone go through the pain of installing Oracle java when you can just install openjdk from the repos. If you develop on windows, Adoptium.net will give you prebuilt openjdk.
I used something like that with Global Entry at LAX.
A homebuilt rack mounted server running Fedora and sendmail. I’ve been using/configuring sendmail since the 80’s and we didn’t have fancy .mc preprocessing back then.
The outgoing relay is a paid service by Hostinger which resells titan.email. I just set the configuration in the relay to use the same credentials I set up in my SMTP/IMAP connections in tbird.
I set up my outgoing email to relay through an external server. I used to have comcast business class but when I sold my house, my only option at my condo is the comcast provided by the HOA (Comcast communities) which is residential. So lots of sites refuse to accept email send directly from my server. Comcast has a relay but it has crazy low rate limiting which is a pain when we need to send emails to all players.
I love my NUCs but haven’t really paid attention to what has happened since Intel sold that line to ASUS.
I never said that users were involved in this. This is just grabbing some bugs off the queue that are simple to fix but have been deprioritized by project manager.
But they do make the customer happy because they are the one that submitted the bug.
Those would not be considered low hanging fruit.
I thought that buffoon was out of my memory Everybody Loves Eric Raymond
I am steadfast that I will occasionally take some time and kill off some low hanging fruit. For me, its kind of like a break and lets me clear my head on the bigger issues.
And its pronounced “Brad”
That would have been great when my ex made lasagna and he didn’t know the difference between a clove and a bulb.