They're serving the wrong cert on pkg-containers.githubusercontent.com (it's for *.githubassets.com) and their support site also expired 3/21... https://support.github.com/ What is going on over there?
They're serving the wrong cert on pkg-containers.githubusercontent.com (it's for *.githubassets.com) and their support site also expired 3/21... https://support.github.com/ What is going on over there?
It’s a lot harder to memory leak in Go and Java than rust.
Just like it’s harder to have a memory safety issue in rust than C++.
if you are worried about data races, use a language like elixir that’s more safe than rust and is great for concurrency.
If you are a rust dev that forces your language into areas where a GC would suffice, than you are just like C++ devs who refuse to use rust for memory safety.
You are introducing memory issues just cause you don’t want to use a better tool.
It's a silly exaggerated example. Point still stands, at least from my experience. Even with a rubric, people still (intentionally or unintentionally) find ways to do things that circumvent the learning goals/outcomes of the assignment
If the real objective is learning goals/outcome rather than (or in addition to) a working temperature circuit, then that objective has to be somehow encoded into the requirements. Or else, sometimes all the stated requirements will be met without that unstated one being hit.
This is difficult because, for instance, the possibility of cheating means that the person who says they performed the assignment might have contracted it off to someone else and learned nothing.
Someone who already has all the required knowledge can also just spin out the assignment without learning anything.
Basically, learning is a state change in the pupil; if you want to validate that some state change occurred, you have to have a way of measuring the state before and after and calculating a difference.
Meh. That sounds nice in theory, but there are many good practical reasons to keep answers private. The number one reason for me is it's very hard to build high quality exercises and assignments, and much easier for students to plagarize off answers on the internet. Reducing the temptation to cheat is pretty important for me.
Just want to mention that his email is on his blog, and he's surprisingly responsive for having such a big following. I once wrote him with some unrelated questions and he gave me a detailed response, which I really appreciated!
I don't think anyone is saying depression is your choice. No one chooses to be depressed, and I would never judge someone badly for being depressed. There's no shame in that. It's what you do about it that matters.
Therapy can take time to make a difference, but I would encourage you to give it a try!