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Gary Wheeler wrote: A few of them get off the bike, pull a collapsible cane out of their cargo bag, and hobble off. I want to be like them when I grow up
Me too!
Gary Wheeler wrote: Good luck with the braces.
Thanks, looking forward to getting back active'r!
They call me different but the truth is they're all the same!
JaxCoder.com
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I spent 10 years practicing Tae Kwon Do and Hapkido when I found that I had lost most of my range of motion; heck I couldn't even approach touching the floor when standing. That rolled back my clock by at least 20 years, undoing the damage caused by sedentary living and office work. What bothers me most now is trying to figure out Medicare! I just got my card and I am deluged by spam - email and snail mail - offering me supplemental coverage. At least the latter will heat my house for decades, but I still have no idea what the differences in offerings are...
Will Rogers never met me.
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I got all those supplemental emails when I first got Medicare and like you I didn't understand it either.
They call me different but the truth is they're all the same!
JaxCoder.com
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Hi All,
Just seen part of the Imitation Game on Film4 a movie channel in the UK, all I can say is location right, pretty much everything else wrong. Alan Turing builds the worlds first programable computer?
No, try Tommy Flowers of the GPO (who put his own money in when the Govertment said no). Single handedly designing the method for braking the Enigma, no a Polish guy did it and invented the machine they appear to be giving credit to Alan Turing. Turing tradic hero, money making movie, the real people not so much. If you have never heard of Tommy Flowers look him up, we owe him more than we do Turing (this is not a nock at Turing, just people appear to giving him too much credit, too late). Mathematians taking credit for Electrical Engineering again this week, I have had too much to drink but it's Friday and I don't care...
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The crying game wasn't that bad either
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Wait! What?!?!?
Well thanks a lot!
BTW. The kid sees dead people.
I, for one, like Roman Numerals.
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Quote: Girls will be boys and boys will be girls
It's a mixed up muddled up shook up world
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Given the type of movies that come out these days years decades, I'd still rather take something like this over just about anything else that's being produced.
In this particular case--I'll take imitation over hunger.
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OK, I'm sold. Sometimes it takes me a while to take on a new technology, especially when I don't want to buy into all the other stuff it gets entangled with. Such was the case with TypeScript, but I really didn't want to drink the Angular Kool-Aid, nor necessarily the ASP.NET / .NET Core Hawaiian Punch. But after figuring out how to get TypeScript to work in Visual Studio in a purely client-side development environment, and after using it now for a week to write a little homebrew application, I am definitely sold. So much less grief with stupid Javascript syntax errors, etc.
Why didn't I do this sooner?
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Now your path to the Dark Side is complete: Click[^]
I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats.
His last invention was an evil Lasagna. It didn't kill anyone, and it actually tasted pretty good.
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CodeWraith wrote: Now your path to the Dark Side is complete
The Dark has so many Sides, I don't think my path could ever be complete.
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If only we knew someone who'd written a book about it[^], eh @Pete-OHanlon?
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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TypeScript is fantastic. I love it and I wish that C# had features like rest and spread (yes, these are JavaScript features, but as it's TypeScript we're talking about, I'm claiming that one for the home team).
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Breaking the lounge rules here, a question about spread. Given something like:
Math.max(...aLargeArray)
and that I read that it does inplace replacement of the parameter list, did you ever look at what happens when the array has 10's of thousands of entries?
I was about to use the spread operator on something and realized this might be a very bad idea, so opted for Math.max.apply(Math, aLargeArray)
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Yeah, that would be a bad use of it. I wouldn't use a spread operation in a scenario like this.
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Definitely one of those things that I feel like I need to try, but never had the time. Maybe this is the encouragement I need to finally give it a go.
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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I've never needed to use it so I haven't. What does it give you?
Social Media - A platform that makes it easier for the crazies to find each other.
Everyone is born right handed. Only the strongest overcome it.
Fight for left-handed rights and hand equality.
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ZurdoDev wrote: What does it give you?
It's the difference between strongly typed vs. duck-typed. So you get real Intellisense and compile-time type checking, which when coupled with an IDE like Visual Studio (one option among many) you get to see the type errors before running the program. Some of the type definition syntax is more functional programming-like, so you can say "this type is of type A or B", which is neat.
Given my general (and strong) distaste for duck-typed languages, TypeScript is a definite boon and significantly decreases the number of bonehead (and some not so bonehead) mistakes that I make programming in pure Javascript. My coding is also faster due to Intellisense, almost up to par with my efficiency with C#.
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Marc Clifton wrote: It's the difference between strongly typed vs. duck-typed. Ya, that's what I have always heard. I guess it's just never been a problem enough for me to care. Someday maybe.
Social Media - A platform that makes it easier for the crazies to find each other.
Everyone is born right handed. Only the strongest overcome it.
Fight for left-handed rights and hand equality.
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Not getting new stuff when it's new isn't the worst of ideas. It's been true for HDMI/HDTV and it's very true in the web space. While we're at it, .NET 1.0 was a great concept but I'm glad I didn't get aboard back then in retrospective as well.
Tech producers are too focused to produce an MVP quickly that they kinda forget the V in the process, going for quickly first.
That said, I don't know how V TS was when it was first released. I am just stating general truths here.
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