#Project2025 focuses on packing the next GOP administration with extreme loyalists to former President Donald Trump.
The plan aims to reinstate #ScheduleF, a Trump-era executive order that makes federal employees fireable at-will, stripping tens of thousands of employees of civil service protections.
Both Trump and others in the conservative movement have said they will clear out the federal government if he is reelected.
The project has even set up online trainings and #loyalty#tests to narrow down potential hires to those who will commit to follow Trump without question.
I keep hearing/seeing things like this when justifying not writing a lot of automated tests: "tests often end up needing to be rewritten because the implementation changed."
And that's just not my experience at all. Though it does depend on how the word "rewritten" is interpreted. Do I have to restructure tests? Sure, if, for example, I wrap a long inside of a PlayerId class, then I'm going to have to change any test that uses/expects a long [to now use a PlayerId].
However, refactoring techniques (at least in Java with IntelliJ IDEA) can make this straightforward, often with no manual code changes.
Does anyone have concrete examples of where tests had to be rewritten because of implementation changes?
While creating #mutants manually to see if #tests are really covering code changes, I realized, that this could be a new "works on my machine". But now it would be "breaks on my machine". As expected from mutants.
A Lorry has succumbed to ongoing confusion apparently caused by a satnav error and driven down a set of stairs in central Edinburgh.
It does amuse while giving cause to wonder whether intelligence tests for driver are not really necessary NOW. Small roads I might understand, but this!
Happy Holidays everyone! And thanks for all the bugs🪲🪲🎄!
Seriously: Hurrah for team bug testers! The bug #reports you are sending in are great! #Tests are thorough and insightful, and your contributions will help make #Plasma6, when it arrives in February, so much better.
Thank you for your time, have a great holiday, and keep the #bugreports coming!
je poursuis mes découvertes de sardines avec cette boîte, Anny à l'huile piquante, achetée en supérette africaine pour 1€.
elles ne sont pas mauvaises, c'est transformé au Maroc. y'a une bonne densité de poisson, sur un coin de la boîte il y a un piment fort. L'huile piquante arrache un peu, mais au moins ce n'est pas timide comme les productions franco-françaises.
en gros c'est une bonne boîte, pas subtile, mais qui bouche un creux et surtout pas chère.
It’s been an awful week - suffering from covid and really being wrung out by this disease! Thankfully work could do without me, so I’ve been allowed to stay at home and sit this out. Here is a test animation I made in the beginning of this week when I was feeling slightly better
Having submitted a ton of PRs to #OpenSource repos recently, I'm surprised by the number of projects having made #integration and #e2e#tests unavailable to external contributors by having them require a #GitHub token to access external systems. Please consider other options.
Dafür verglichen sie oro-/nasopharyngeale Abstriche (aus Nase und Rachen) mit buccalen Abstrichen (von der Innenseite der Wangen) von 107 Omikron-infizierten Krankenhaus-Patienten.
Comprehensions are currently compiled as nested functions, which provides isolation of the comprehension’s iteration variable, but is inefficient at runtime. This PEP proposes to inline list, dictionary, and set comprehensions into the code where they are defined, and provide the expected isolation by pushing/popping clashing locals on the stack.
Last: F Strings will support some common use cases that broke interpolation in the past, like f'{ myDict['myKey'] }' and f"{'n'.join(a)}"
Asking for specific #examples type checking finds is ... unproductive. You write 2 modules of code, run #mypy, and get a list of the 11 places you need to fix - before you've even written unit tests that may or may not have caught the same problem.
If I tried to keep track of them all, I wouldn't have time to write code.
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