French toast does not have to have sugar or cinnamon on it. Savoury french toast (or I grew up calling it eggy bread) is still delicious so you can fuck off with that "bland" accusation!
FishFace
But it doesn't, and that's why it couldn't be the headline.
It doesn't say "trump was sexually attracted to girls under 18" it says he assaulted "young ladies". And that might be splitting hairs when it comes to how big of a scumbag he is, but it very much is not when it comes to writing a headline.
Further, it's not like every letter Epstein wrote was the god's honest truth, so the headline would have to convey that too. Again, we know enough about trump that we're reading that as likely true because we know he's a rapist anyway, but that doesn't mean you can legally print it as "confirmation" as you put it.
Yeah but I've never heard anyone use the word "divisible" in a non mathematical context. It's fundamentally about numbers. You'd never say "three is divisible by two" apart from about maths. You'd never say "this cake is divisible by two", which is already not the context you were talking in, you'd say "you can cut this cake in half".
what non-mathematical meaning are we talking about here?
That's not what divisible means
He could throw away a million soldiers and get bogged down in bitter attritional warfare? Oh boy!
We switched to structured logging a while ago and it's very useful. We have used sentry for ages though and that was a bigger improvement. Many hard to debug problems have actually been trivialised by it, due to the context it provides.
This is for a monolithic application though, I dunno how this would scale for microservices.
The goal of logging a single event per request seems very ambitious imo. But maybe there are things out there that make it easier to glom logs onto a single context object easily and transfer it between services.
Honestly though I think you get a lot of the way there if ever structured log line related to a request includes a request id so you can just filter on that.
Probably yes, because such an aggressively architected system probably serves millions of users and would fall over if it were simpler.
Not to say nothing is ever too complicated but there is a valid reason why these things exist
This may have been true at one point but gnome apps started removing basic functionality and hiding what was there in a horrible disorganised burger menu instead of traditional menus.
Sounds like an American English thing. It's a ground vehicle, so literally you're driving it, in any case.
Omg me?
Can't imagine playing any strategy game without a mouse!