Not so long ago I was cleaning out the family refrigerator and shocked to see how much food went unchecked for years, some left to spoil. Lesson here? Don't buy more food than you plan to consume.
One form of recreation I enjoy as much as hiking is listening to music. Depending on the genre and whether I'm studying or just relaxing, it can be either a powerful motivator or a pleasant distraction.
Having put it aside for years, I've decided to take up gardening again. While doing spring cleaning, I found some leftover potting soil and a large pot, so I used them to plant yellow bell peppers.
You might not think this at first glance, particularly if you've been tormented by boring book reports in school, but reading books can be an entertaining form of recreation to stimulate the mind.
Time for another change of topic for my next Monday Memo. Maybe something to do with recreation. Yes, that'll do.
If you're into hiking like I am, try taking new paths or trails from time to time.
Every time you go on a hike, may be should take a picture and post them to memo. May be start a hiking-memos channel for all hikers on memo :)
Good requirements help here. Also requirements should be the basis of your test cases.
Correct, and if you're starting a project from scratch, then you can establish good requirements by identifying the problem and determining constraints and actions a user might take.
Monday Memo!
When writing code, you should comment it regularly, particularly functions and any lines whose meaning isn't obvious. That way your code can be understood later on and doesn't become write-only.
Good requirements help here. Also requirements should be the basis of your test cases.
Monday Memo!
When writing code, you should comment it regularly, particularly functions and any lines whose meaning isn't obvious. That way your code can be understood later on and doesn't become write-only.
Don't you know the maxim "It was hard to write, it should be hard to understand!"? 😉
When writing code, you should comment it regularly, particularly functions and any lines whose meaning isn't obvious. That way your code can be understood later on and doesn't become write-only.
I hope you all spent this Easter well, and Happy Earth Day to the environmentalists among us. Nothing like making a gesture as small as planting a tree or two, not to mention walking instead of driving!
Today's exactly one year since I've joined this platform, and I'm pleased to have done so. My experience here has confirmed that the pay-per-post model works, as it encourages creative content.
In general, don't hesitate to use libraries if they aid in writing a program. A good exception is when you're developing for particular environments where libraries are scarce or inferior.
I understand and appreciate the business model behind BAT. That said, I use Brave as my primary browser and take advantage of the occasional promotions (token grants).
Well of course that is true but they came up with the idea and we are in the free world, everyone can create their own platform. That is why i asked about #bch on a similar browser.
Having done more research, I've realized BAT is actually an ERC20 token. I still think it would be better off on BCH, since it scales better than ETH (cryptokitties, anyone?).
Why do you think that way, actually i am impressed by the revolutionary approach towards monopolized ad revenues. Imagine this ecosystem with a decentralized search engine.
I think what Twatter means is that BAT is unnecessary as a separate cryptocurrency. Anything it does could be implemented on top of BCH using, say, SLP tokens. Same goes for STEEM.
Aww, I admit I'm disappointed. I really thought there was some genius on here who managed to crack my memo so quickly. I guess my expectations were too high!