Just so you know, I've played Alchemist on a ranked game. After 23 mins, my items were BOT, Battle Fury, Radiance, Dagger, Bottle, annnnd Divine Rapier. As soon as I get the DR, I've TP next to a clash, with AM and Medusa on it while I'm casting Unstable Concoction. 2 of my team mates died already and the rest were running for their lives. I'm battling against 3 heroes at that moment. I suddenly forget that I'm casting stun, supposed to direct against Medusa then it hit right back to me. AM ...
Blinked in next to me, next thing I know, our tier 4 tower has been destroyed waiting for the Throne to get destroyed while AM enjoying my DR at 25 minute mark!
I forked a repo from GitHub but one branch isn't available, I have this repo forked already before the branch is created when I fork it again it goes to my fork, without that branch any idea?
Sorry why are you 1) Forking documentation and 2) Not having client copies of your fork - what's the point in forking if you're not doing anything with it
1) I'm writing an article to be added to the doc 2) no need to a client copy, I'm already writing it down in a Google doc and then will move it to my fork directly from GitHub and then issue a PR
I still didn't get its use even after reading some articles/posts about it.
I'm kind of accustomed to use a long date+time format back in the days when I'm still doing PHP+MySQL. I always assume that the time is in milliseconds since Jan 1, 1970 (most common epoch). Later, I have discovered that DateTime in C# is not using the default format I am expecting it to be. It defaults to DateTime.Kind.Local
I'm currently having some problems with a C# project I'm working on (in Unity), is this the right chat to ask for help, or should I post it as a normal question on stackoverflow?
It's an interpolation function. You pass the current and the final value then you choose on a variety of easing functions how to achieve it. The common easing function is linear
Or a separate enum for priority. Come to think of it, "blocker" is a more of a relationship than pure data. The next logical question after seeing "blocler" might be: "what is it blocking?"