This was so fun, thank you so much for sharing your experience in open source. it was very insipiring to me, and i'm motivated to start contributing to OSS wish you a good day
1:04:36 => you will love this vim move: use visual block mode to select all the 1 starting at the second one, then type g and then C-a. This will add 1 to the first selected, 2 to the second, etc... :) (learned that from the Primeagen)
12:25 According to the commonmark spec (which rustdoc uses to generate html) you can also use a backslash at the end of the line to force a single-line break instead of a paragraph break.
Sorry if this is a common question, but how did you actually do "!rust smth" in the browser? What is it called so I can find more information about it.
On the flamegraph :go:name: issue. I think you can do better. Many of the event modifiers are mutually exclusive, i.e., you can’t have both u and k (CPU cannot be in both user and kernel modes), so, if you hit both, it’s not a valid flag field and you can return false. This reduces the number of false positives. Important? idk…
Not to be the negative Nancy here but I find these streams to be your worst type of content. It might be that you are jumping around between different projects and it is hard to follow along (especially for the ones where you have not done a large stream about them earlier). Maybe smaller videos focused on only one project at a time could improve the format? I zoned out after 2-3 hours and did not actually finish watching this one. Still a fan of your regular content :)
That's totally fine - not all the content is for everyone. This stream, and the ones like it, aren't intended for quite the same audience or use as my other content. For some, this part of (open) software engineering is super interesting to get insight into, and for others, not so much. The way to think about it is more so that this is work I have to do regardless, so I figure I might as well turn the camera on for those who do find value in watching it. If I didn't turn it on, I'd still be spending the same time behind the scenes, and I wouldn't be producing other videos *instead*, so there's no real downside to just making them public!
Watched it all after I woke up, please do more of these!
You are the best teacher
Love to see you putting this out, it’s such a great peek into what happens behind the scenes. Hope you’re doing well!
Awesome content! Was really interesting learning about branch prediction!
This was so fun, thank you so much for sharing your experience in open source.
it was very insipiring to me, and i'm motivated to start contributing to OSS
wish you a good day
I really liked this content. Thanks for sharing this with us as this is very helpful to get a glimpse of how people are doing open source work.
big fan of this type of content, thanks you so much
thank you, i always learn from watching your videos
Thanks legend.
love all your videos.
the bottom firefox navigation bar, love it
1:04:36 => you will love this vim move: use visual block mode to select all the 1 starting at the second one, then type g and then C-a. This will add 1 to the first selected, 2 to the second, etc... :) (learned that from the Primeagen)
love this series
12:25 According to the commonmark spec (which rustdoc uses to generate html) you can also use a backslash at the end of the line to force a single-line break instead of a paragraph break.
Thanks sir ❤❤
This browser extension is really cool that puts the task bar on the bottom. How is this called? :)
Sorry if this is a common question, but how did you actually do "!rust smth" in the browser? What is it called so I can find more information about it.
Oh, I found a chrome extension that does the trick with "rs" :)
Oh, that's built into the search engine DuckDuckGo that I'm using!
26:48 consulting with the council lol
On the flamegraph :go:name: issue. I think you can do better. Many of the event modifiers are mutually exclusive, i.e., you can’t have both u and k (CPU cannot be in both user and kernel modes), so, if you hit both, it’s not a valid flag field and you can return false. This reduces the number of false positives. Important? idk…
Not to be the negative Nancy here but I find these streams to be your worst type of content. It might be that you are jumping around between different projects and it is hard to follow along (especially for the ones where you have not done a large stream about them earlier). Maybe smaller videos focused on only one project at a time could improve the format? I zoned out after 2-3 hours and did not actually finish watching this one.
Still a fan of your regular content :)
That's totally fine - not all the content is for everyone. This stream, and the ones like it, aren't intended for quite the same audience or use as my other content. For some, this part of (open) software engineering is super interesting to get insight into, and for others, not so much. The way to think about it is more so that this is work I have to do regardless, so I figure I might as well turn the camera on for those who do find value in watching it. If I didn't turn it on, I'd still be spending the same time behind the scenes, and I wouldn't be producing other videos *instead*, so there's no real downside to just making them public!
@@jonhoo thanks alot sir for thinking about us novices in the software field 🙏🙏