I’m a #SoftwareDeveloper from #Switzerland. My languages are #Java, #CSharp, #Javascript, German, English, and #SwissGerman. I’m in the process of #LearningJapanese.

I like to make custom #UserScripts and #UserStyles to personalize my experience on the web. In terms of #Gaming, currently I’m mainly interested in #VintageStory and #HonkaiStarRail. I’m a big fan of #Modding.
I also watch #Anime and read #Manga.

#fedi22 (for fediverse.info)

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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: March 11th, 2024

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  • How often do y’all convert your measurements?

    It’s second nature in metric. All the time.

    Judging by your post, it sounds like that’s not the case in imperial. But you need to understand that especially converting between mm, cm, m, and km, for example, is not just extremely common, it’s just normal. If you add up 10 times a 1000 meters, you don’t call that 10000 meters, that would be awkward. You say it’s 10 km.

    We convert all the time, so that’s why we assume the same must be the case in imperial and thus the easy conversions must be focused on because clearly they would get you to understand why metric is superior.





  • I agree in general, never liked Python at all, but this part:

    Why so many different ways to declare an array-like structure? Tuples, Sets, Dicts, Lists? Dude… ffs, I know each one supposedly has a “different” purpose, I literally don’t see any good benefits on it. It just makes me more confuse.

    It just speaks of your inexperience. You mention Java in the title, you’ve never worked with HashMap and other basic collections? This isn’t something Python changed, it’s a staple in modern programming languages. And with “modern” I mean that Map was added to Java in version 1.2.



  • Is Piefed implementing this in some weird way?

    Iirc previous work on this in the fediverse involved a very clear way of doing it that makes sure to address the issue you’re bringing up there.

    The idea is that you send activities to announce the move and mark the original actor as having moved to the new actor (and the new actor as being the new home of the original actor). Instances then verify this by whether that actor relationship is specified correctly on both sides (does going new actor -> origin actor -> new actor lead back to where we started from?).

    Is that not also Piefed’s implementation? Because if it is, I don’t see your scenario being viable. Since the move needs to be acknowledged by both sides, it cannot just be faked.



  • To be fair OP isn’t the only one that finds it concerning. Kbin/Mbin had tons of complaints about its public voting until the Mbin devs decided to cave and hide downvotes. Piefed also tried to implement private voting before, but gave up because of their halfhearted approach not working out.

    I personally like public votes. It’s great to see who upvoted me, especially if it’s someone I recognize. While I miss being able to see downvotes, because sometimes I do feel like asking for feedback from downvoters on where I could do better.

    That said, there’s an issue of consent there imo. So I do understand the complaints. While a receiving instance is technically free to do with the federated vote what they want, the user never really consented to that. It’s like if an instance made private messages public. Theoretically it’s allowed to, but that doesn’t mean people would be happy about it.


  • To allow other instances to know about your vote, Lemmy federates it. This involves the post you downvoted and your account. Neither is really optional here, as the receiving instance needs your account to verify the vote.

    When another instance receives your vote, it’s up to them how they handle it. Mbin used to display both of them to users, but due to backlash from Lemmy users they made downvotes private eventually. Upvotes are still visible on Mbin though. Other fediverse platforms might also display your votes to users like Mbin and Lemvotes do. And of course anyone can make a minimal ActivityPub implementation and subscribe to a Lemmy community and get all the votes made within.



  • I think the US naming themselves after America isn’t really any different from the European Union naming itself after Europe.

    It’s “United States OF America”, not “United States that are America”. It’s a bunch of united states that exist in America, not the states that make up America.

    Please assume that stale carrot man isn’t in office and that the U.S. is currently being a reasonable and humane country that actually stands for democracy, liberty, and freedom.

    It’s not like the US was a leader in those things before Trump. He didn’t invent the issues, he just made them more visible. The US has always overthrown democratically elected governments to install dictators, and people have complained about its own election system for ages. There’s a lack of consumer and labor protections, and the fact you only have two right-wing parties and anything left of center is considered extremist opinions doesn’t help at all. It’s honestly hard to imagine the US actually standing for democracy, liberty, and freedom, beyond empty propaganda.








  • But i tried to post something and their systeem kept deleting my post. I didnt said anything wrong.

    This place is a strong anti-Reddit echo chamber, it’s not really the best place to ask about this.

    Do you know if the post was removed by a moderator or Reddit themselves?

    Iirc a post can look removed if automoderator marked it for a manual moderator review. This can happen for reasons like your account being too new, you not having enough karma, or you using certain keywords they want to manually review. It’s usually meant to prevent spam, not anything nefarious.
    I’ve seen someone before complain on Lemmy about this exact issue, and it turned out the post in question was clearly there on their profile because the mods approved it between them complaining here and me checking their Reddit profile.

    It’s also possible that your understanding of what’s wrong to say might be wrong. This is especially the case if Reddit themselves removed your post. They don’t just do that for no reason. Even when a post gets removed for mentioning Lemmy, that’s overzealous mods doing the removal, not the admins.
    It’s also possible that your post might look innocuous to you, but not to another person. For example, there are certain numbers that when used can get you labeled a neo nazi. Expressions might get misunderstood. English being a second language for either side might lead to misleading language or misinterpretations. Basically just listing potential reasons here I can come up with for why an innocuous looking post might get removed without ill intent, not saying any of this is justified imo.

    If the post was removed by a moderator, the answer to your final question is simple: people post to a different subreddit that mod isn’t in control of.


  • This isn’t about health complications you might face in the future.

    Your priority is your studies, right? They WILL suffer from you not getting enough sleep. If you want to prioritize your studies, you need sufficient sleep.

    A well rested mind performs better, and sleep is actually pretty important on its own for the learning process.