@RaghavSood I'm finally in the habit of investing a fixed amount of each paycheck before I pay any bills. It goes into Robinhood or ETrade, though, not a savings account.
i always thought the opposite. ios dev better than android. i remember drag and drop ui similar to constraintlayout they had it in ios way back in 2010
Only time I felt android is suck, is when Im updating API level, we found google's bugs everytime. Updating Api level is so much expensive for production.
i had a similar experience with the new os version background limitation and starting service would lead to illegalstateexception when app is in background. This happened with amazon aws android sdk. the issue is still open and awaiting a fix from amazon
swift is at pair with kotlin tho, none is better. maybe android's newest APIS are better to handle, but the inherited obj-c framework APIs on IOS are hell
i like both "in their way". but IOS UI management is horrible and has dozens of automation issues
and while their native swift apis are lovely and give space for some of the best libs i've seen out there ( like AlamoFire networking), the old obj-c legacy code in the system makes it cluttered
and while android's UI is super cool easier XML, layers, masks, etc etc
AOSP apis like BLE, Fragments and shit like that is broken AF
and the only solution would be a complete writeover
so both are cool and both suck, but android sucks slightly less because you don't always need the Broken APIs, but you always need to do a UI.
and the least sucker is insert_hybrid_framework, be it ionic, react native, or whatever. code once, design once, build twice.
Just read the boldest and wrongest CV "About" section ever. Claiming to contribute to the community at SO and github early and regularly caught my attention. Two public PR on github since 2017 and 5k rep (in 6.5 years) and one answer since 2017 on SO
Dima, have you started AS when you had only one monitor active? I have that issue with misplaced popups only when AS is started running one monitor and plugging in a second one afterwards
It is caused by naming @+id="class"
****** Do not use a reserved word such as class in id name ******
Today I had so panicked because of naming a View id = class
Thanks, it might help You. and it may help me also in the future. so I posted.
I have an observable edittext, every time text changes with debounce of 2000ms the observable emits. This works. I want to do something everytime that emits. I want to flatmap repo.update() which is a completable. I use flatmapCompletable{} for this. The update() is executed but the flow ends there. This is because the completable originates from an observable that is being transformed with .toCompletable, however that observable never emits a complete event so the toCompletable never completes
You don't need to calculate it in the constructor, indeed you shouldn't, as that would risk it going out-of-sync with the properties it's derived from. — jonrsharpe1 min ago
110.000 spanish republican soldiers made the first massive combined amphibious attack in history, crossing the ebro river from it's sea end to the mountain peaks, and pushing back the fascist forces up to Zaragoza. facing 280.000 enemies, they managed to conquer and hold 880km2
the front would stall due to lack of supplies after the first 40 days, but they would retain that land for 120 days more 1 against 3 in numbers, and with fewer air support.
the lack of international aid during that last "push for freedom" sentenced the spanish republic and gave the rising fascist axis it's first victory in mainland europe.few months after the end of the battle, and the Republic itself, in 1939, those veteran italian and german soldiers, tankers and pilots would lay waste to europe.
> "Following extensive performance testing under numerous workloads, we've identified that there is a missing digital key in the firmware that impacts the thermal management system and could drive clock speeds down under heavy thermal loads on the new MacBook Pro," an Apple spokesperson tells CNET. "A bug fix is included in today's MacOS High Sierra 10.13.6 Supplemental Update and is recommended.
"We apologize to any customer who has experienced less than optimal performance on their new systems. Customers can expect the new 15-inch MacBook Pro to be up to 70 percent faster, and the 13-inc…
obviously, if one accepts his fault, he might get fined for company's loss. I knew someone in Tata Motors who got striped of three months salary because he was involved in a Test Drive with a customer without driving licence.
but, even then, what do you say if your co finds exact line of code causing the problem, last committed by you?
worst case scenario in my case was "we all fucked up, so we all start working tomorrow at 6am to fix it because at 9 is the client's meeting. we'll leave earlier in exchange".