Yep. I feel like all of the high-value like high-quality posters are now here or elsewhere and are done with reddit. I used to post a ton on reddit, even across multiple accounts. Now I just post here. lol
Yep. I feel like all of the high-value like high-quality posters are now here or elsewhere and are done with reddit. I used to post a ton on reddit, even across multiple accounts. Now I just post here. lol
Actually, to be fair, they’re being paid salaries to work on Lemmy lol
Though the 0.18.0 update was quite nice and solved a lot of issues I had, so it’s definitely cool to see how well it’s progressing.
Oh, so that’s why I can’t land a job this year. lol
Still some improvements need to be made but it’s way more usable now than before 0.18.0.
You’re not wrong lol though tbf 0.18.0 made Lemmy quite a bit more usable for me.
As someone who is mostly a backend dev, I can confirm that this is accurate. lol
Actually, exception rethrowing is a real thing - at least in Java. You may not always want to handle the exception at the absolute lowest level, so sometimes you will instead “bubble” the exception up the callstack. This in turn can help with centralizing exception handling, separation of concerns, and making your application more modular.
It seems counter-intuitive but it’s actually legit, again at least in Java. lol
What if we’re all AI?