@hugovk That's a lot of complexity to find out what version of `setuptools_scm` I've got, particularly when I don't really want to be on the aggressive bitrot train.
The headaches started when I first installed it and they aren't so bad, but honestly it's just kinda not worth it? I don't think the problem it solves is that time-consuming, so it doesn't take much of a headache to not be worth it.
I think at this point `setuptools_scm` (and other tools like it) have probably caused more headaches for me than they've solved.
@bernat @internetarchive When I wanted a similar thing, I used this: https://github.com/hartator/wayback-machine-downloader
I doubt they'll have something easy to import into WordPress straight out of the box (though I haven't used WordPress in 15 years, so maybe it's easier now?), but at least you'd have the text, and you can do some cleanup on that.
@y2mango You have jinxed it. Now you are going to get a report tomorrow that says, "Cannot report bugs on Feb 29" 😛
Also it turns out I set up release automation for `dateutil` over 3 years ago and completely forgot about it and only ever used it once. Thanks, past me!
Cutting this release has made me nostalgic for the days when I was a conscientious, responsive and organized maintainer 😛
Oops, someone made it so that you could lazy-load `dateutil` submodules over 4 years ago and I never cut a release including that.
That has now been rectified in `python-dateutil` version 2.9.0. Enjoy: https://pypi.org/project/python-dateutil/
New release of DateType today, since apparently (oops!) I forgot to include year, month, and day attributes on DateTime:
Get excited for PyCon US 2024! Full talk schedule has been announced!
✅ Read our blog
✅ Follow our Keynote speakers ( @kjaymiller @brainwane @simon Kate Chapman)
✅ Check our Talks Schedule
✅ Register for Tutorials, etc
✅ ✅ ✅ Go!
https://pycon.blogspot.com/2024/02/pycon-us-2024-schedule-launch.html
@pganssle it seems to be treating the sum of True as True, and True/2 is 0.5.
You can change the dtype to get a more normal looking answer.
@jerub This is an interesting one. Why is it doing that?
Metadata 2.3 is now supported on pypi, you can now upload source distributions with reliable metadata https://github.com/pypi/warehouse/pull/13606
Maturin support: https://github.com/PyO3/maturin/pull/1965
@pganssle
I think your post contains some sort of embed not supported by all instances: I only saw it when opening it in a browser.
For others, it's NERD Summit:
https://techhub.social/@nerdsummit
I'll be speaking at this, so if you are in the Western Mass area and are interested to hear about the app I built to teach my kids to have perfect pitch, stop on in. 😀
@durin42 If I were to put all of youtube on VHS tapes, how many Olympic Swimming pools would it fill?
Found the issue here — after `libuim.so` showed up in some stack traces for other things that were crashing (e.g. Element), I installed `ibus` and uninstalled `uim`, and now everything works again. 🎉.
And apparently in some contexts I am now able to do the Super + . shortcut to pull up an emoji picker!
I feel like I've been lucky that when I saw the [Keep a Changelog](https://keepachangelog.com/en/1.0.0/) page, I thought, "Hm, weird that people need to be told that — all the (public-facing) software I know and work on maintains changelogs.
I am guessing that this is... not as common in some other software ecosystems.
@pganssle https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juice_jacking
“As of April 2023 there have been no credible reported cases of juice jacking outside of research efforts.”
@acdha @glyph I suppose the difference is that the monetization strategy for credit card skimmers is straightforward, and in the pre-chip days it was pretty valuable to skim ~1000 cards or whatever.
Compromising random phones is probably not especially valuable even if juice jacking worked 100% of the time, and your hit rate is probably lower than what you'd get by tricking people into installing something via some other mechanism. The fact that it's mostly been mitigated on the software side probably makes it not cost-effective.
Programmer working at Google. Python core developer and general FOSS contributor. I also post some parenting content.