![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/0cd73c00-8eba-4acf-bfc7-76f126a3c8c2.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/0130a5eb-ebd6-402a-961b-6dc94d9541ca.jpeg)
I read it as "the only method to discourage is to ignore them so I better not ignore them so they do not become discouraged.
I read it as "the only method to discourage is to ignore them so I better not ignore them so they do not become discouraged.
Apparently it doesn’t all even out!
We’re gonna need your friend to pick up another from ball-mart.
How many of those were actually good, though?
Genuinely asking, I only saw 3 out of the 5 and don’t remember being blown away by any of them. I’m not sure I even remember the plot of some.
But I can still immediately recall songs from both Encanto and Moana and I haven’t seen either of those in years.
ins feels like insert. uin feels like it skips the first n on accident. To me, anyways.
deleted by creator
This is America, you can basically sue anyone for anything.
Whether you’ll be successful or not is a different question.
Nah, they’re very similar, really. You generally kick IO heavy stuff you don’t need immediately off to async await.
There are a few more applications of it in C# since you don’t have the “single thread” to work with like in JS. And the actual implementation under the hood is different, sure. But conceptually they’re similar. Pretty sure JS was heavily influenced by C#'s implementation and syntax.
That feels more like a Netflix move than an Amazon move.
Invincible is pretty good.
Idk about woust-er sauce, pretty sure that’s just dropping a syllable.
But the rest of it is because the syllables are supposed to be worce-ster-shire.
Doesn’t always work, especially if you need to work with any sort of calendar or recurring schedule.