orclev

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

That's probably why I like Rust so much. I've felt for a long time now that after the concept of null, the widespread embrace of OO is probably the second worst decision in programming. While it was certainly better than the goto hell that preceded it, inheritance I think has ultimately proven to be a trap.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Before there was python, before there was node, there was perl. It's old, it's crufty, it's a product of a bygone age, but even today if you want to do something with regular expressions and ingesting text it's still one of the easiest options. Of course it's highly debatable if you should ever use regex to ingest text.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago (2 children)

If the law was changed in such a way that it only ever applied to a specific person sure, but changing laws after someone does something is kind of the way things work. Somebody does a thing, everyone goes "I can't believe they did that, there should be a law against it" and then a law gets passed or amended. Is that law targeting that specific person at that point? Kind of, in that the actions of that person prompted the change, but it would have been the same if a different person had done the same thing.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I really want to see what these numbers look like on the 1st after all the 3rd party clients are dead. Presumably that will also kill most of the bots as well. I suspect the numbers don't look worse because a significant chunk of the post and comment traffic is automated which will stop working at the end of the month.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Automatic upvote for the Niven reference. I don't think anything would stop Trump from grifting money from his supporters. It's like the kobayashi maru, the only options are the least bad ones.

In this case I think they've opted to split the difference and take a mugshot proving he's still being treated like a criminal (although it would have been better to have forced him to wear handcuffs), but not release it to deny him as much free fundraising fodder as they can.

Ultimately as you point out it won't really matter, they'll just photoshop something, but at least this way someone will need to put in the effort to make the image and we'll all get some entertainment about how horrendous of a job they'll inevitably do.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

One of the advantages of federation is that content can be distributed but still accessible, so on the one hand it doesn't really matter that there are three (actually more than that) rust communities on lemmy. On the other hand it can be confusing for newcomers and introduces a discoverability problem.

The factors I'd look at are how reliable is this instance, how well moderated is this instance, and lastly what are the rules of this instance.

On the first point lemmy.ml loses some points. It's heavily trafficed and struggling at the moment under that load. lemmyrs.org on the other hand is pretty new and low volume but so far seems stable. I can't speak to programming.dev because I didn't even know that instance existed until I saw this post.

On the second point I'm not sure there's enough data to go on other than to say that the main reason the quality of moderation matters is because a poorly moderated or controversial instance is likely to be defederated from other instances. While lemmy.ml is a fairly lightly moderated instance its importance as one of the founding and largest instances means it's unlikely to be defederated.

On the third point it seems like lemmyrs.org would have the least friction with the Rust community since it's ostensibly dedicated to said community and therefore should have no reason not to enforce the CoC of the community. I'm not sure what the rules of programming.dev are. lemmy.ml on the other hand has a fairly modest set of site wide rules. The rust communities would be free to enact more restrictive sets of rules however so ultimately as long as the rules of the instance aren't felt to be too restrictive by the community I'm not sure it actually matters.

Ultimately I think what will become the Rust lemmy community will likely come down to whichever one eventually gets the blessing of the larger Rust community. Once it's listed somewhere in the main Rust sites that will then be where everyone will gravitate towards. Until then just subscribe to all of them.