HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

weeksie

no profile record

comments

weeksie
·hace 4 meses·discuss
Very eager to read through your code! I read the first version and incorporated several of its ideas into our own internal elixir agent framework. (We make use of your ReqLLM package, thanks much for that!)

Congrats on the release!
weeksie
·hace 6 meses·discuss
in mice
weeksie
·hace 7 meses·discuss
Most of the team uses:

- Claude Code + worktrees (manual via small shell script)

- A root guardrails directory with a README to direct the agent where to look for applicable rule files (we have a monorepo of python etls and elixir applications)

- Graphite for stacked prs <3

- PR Reviews: Sourcery + Graphite's agent + Codex + Claude just sorta crank 'em, sourcery is chatty but it's gotten a lot better lately.

(editor-wise, most of us are nvim users)

Lots of iteration. Feature files (checked into the repo). Graphite stacks are amazing for unblocking the biggest bottleneck in ai assisted development which is validation/reviews. Solving the conflict hell of stacked branches has made things go much, much faster and it's acted as downward pressure on the ever increasing size of PRs.
weeksie
·hace 9 años·discuss
Apologies for completely misreading your post. And I agree with everything you've said.
weeksie
·hace 9 años·discuss
I find people who say things like this don't understand the great amount of good that elementary education provides. Basic literacy and mathematics skills are tough things to teach effectively. They're not at all difficult to provide if you have the time and resources to spend on your child, but many people do not (have the inclination or the time). Bad idea to punish the children of those people for their parents' decisions.

Until you've seen the difference a good elementary education can make for a kid growing up in The Bronx, I'd say hold off on the snap judgement.