This seems like a great idea, but it seems to overwrite a lot of native python that would make this more flexible.
With some quick playing around, I don't see a way to parameterize is. Ie. If I want to show a different amount of workers in your example[1] if I am creating a dev or prod diagram. It would be really nice to be able pre-define certain parts of the diagram and add as desired.
Coming from a longtime marijuana friendly state, I've noticed that it has also lowered the stigma of other "hard" drugs. Since weed is no longer the socially-acceptable illegal drug, others like cocaine has taken is place.
I've long wondered if this will be a trend across the country.
For my job, I've created a python ask and CLI that meets the exact needs of how I need to communicate with our API. It's leaps and bounds better than any postman collection my employees use
The code is a mess so I haven't shared, but it is something that makes me more productive every day.
I still use Signal a lot, since most people I frequently talk to use it. However, this was extremely frustrating. Having 1 messaging app for so long was incredibly nice.
I like the way you word this. Similar to the product I make, I describe my mind as an asynchronous queue. I can only reason about one thing at a time, but when I do that is fairly random.
How this has played out in my life gives me caution about making this standard in computing.
Off topic, but I've been very irritated they're removing SMS support. It was a killer feature that allowed me to adopt signal as my sole messaging app.
That's a snarky reading of my experience. As an aptitude test, my "working for it" was my seventeen years of learning and developing cognitive skills leading up to the test.
Can you, or anyone else, say you learned something beneficial by studying for a standardized test? Was there anything worthwhile about it sans the score?
As a stubborn, idealistic teenager I refused to do any preparation for the SAT/ACT. I believed that I _should_ be an aptitude test so I treated it as one.
Would preparation have been helpful? Most likely. But I was happy with my >2000 score, and felt.lkke.i earned it more by not preparing.
I flew to UAE on Emirates in coach. Definitely the best flying experience of my life. I would say it even beats out the couple times I flew AA first class domestic.
It's actually rooted in America's puritanical roots. Americans were largely introduced to bidets during WWII in French bordellos. It didn't leave a good reputation coming back.
I've seen this happening for the last couple years, which is disappointing. It's always been the only social platform I use with frequency, but that's becoming harder with fewer of my peers using it.
Interesting, I've been working on the same thing (with the same name)! Since I developed it at work, I had been waiting on corporate approval to open source it.
Edit: I wanted to say I definitely gained some inspiration by looking at yours.