I would just suggest the author to replace the sentence “99% of the time, it refers to motion in one dimension” with “most of the time” since this is a mathematical article and there’s no need to use specific numbers when they don’t reflect actual data.
1. Go to youtube.com in the browser, play the video, switch back to the home screen. Video playback will stop, which is a good default behavior.
2. Swipe down from the top of the screen which brings up "Notification Center" which somewhat strangely contains a playback control for the browser.
3. Press play. Audio resumes. If it's part of a playlist, you don't have to manually advance, it will play automatically.
No ads, no youtube premium subscription, no "desktop mode", no sideloading, no additional apps other than the beloved ad blocker.
Are there specific advantages to using Jujutsu over Emacs Magit?
All other Git UIs I've used have been severely lacking, but Magit has made me significantly more productive with Git, and has convinced me of the "magic of git".
Is Jujutsu interested in competing with this experience? Or is it intended as an alternative to the (to be clear, extremely poor) git user experiences outside of Emacs?
- updated_at
- deleted_at (soft deletes)
- created_by etc
- permission used during CRUD
to every table is a solution weaker than having a separate audit log table.
I feel that mixing audit fields with transactional data in the same table is a violation of the separation of concerns principle.
In the proposed solution, updated_at only captures the last change only. A problem that a separate audit log table is not affected to.
> On Mac, Window and Linux
should be
> On Mac, Windows and Linux