That is one magnificent dandelion đł
Maybe fix the nick too. Having a @
in the # nick =
field doesnât work well. Itâs a bug in yarnd
đ€Ł
@@texto-plano.xyz Oh this is a Gemini feed. You should update its Avatar, it has none đ
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org mind it, English is my second language, though I have been using it since 1992, almost constantly.
âNext weekendâ, is the weekend after the one coming up. The one coming up is âthis weekendâ, or simply âthe weekendâ (as in, âsee you this weekend!â or âwill mow the lawn on the weekendâ). I donât like the perceived ambiguity of it, thus I strictly use dates (âlets get together on Saturday, 4 May 2024â). đ
There is also legit which is probably better than what Iâve done.
web frontend for git
@bender@twtxt.net gitxt probably would do the trick for you đ Itâs not quite as polished as Iâd like, but it works.
@Anthony_Sorace@a.9srv.net There is no try! :D
Thank you very much, @bender@twtxt.net! I just linked the thumbnail to safe on peopleâs bandwidths. I figured if someone wants to view the photos, they just go to the album anyways. If one has no interest, itâs less invasive on them.
Picking the money shot is always tricky. Especially since I have been sorting through them for an hour or more. I try to keep at most 10%. And yes, I very often do hate myself for pressing the trigger so many times when I come home. So by then Iâm kind of sick looking at them any more. :-D Sorry, I try harder next time. ;-)
@bender@twtxt.net Damn, I got caught. :-D
Btw. how does it work in English? In German itâs ambiguous which weekend one addresses when saying ânext weekendâ. Is it the coming one this week or the one in the next week? Different people interpret it differently if it is not inherently obvious from the context, like when talking about dates. I also noticed that sometimes the same person even switches between meanings. I think I do, too. But I donât know why.
Maybe it depends on when one says it. I could be totally wrong here, but earlier in the week, like on Mondays and Tuesdays chances for âweekend in the same weekâ are higher than towards the weekend (Thursdays and Fridays), then itâs more likely to refer to the weekend in the next week. And yes, the week of course starts on Monday. ;-)
Not sure if it changes with dialects. :-? I assume that doesnât play a big role and is the same for all German-speaking regions.
On the other hand, âthis weekendâ is very well defined as the upcoming weekend in this week. Itâs only the term ânext weekendâ that can be problematic.
@prologic@twtxt.net Good question. Two things come straigt to mind, although, Iâm not sure how low hanging they are. Probably not even remotely.
I donât know what these three search types mean: âMatchâ, âTermâ and âQuery Stringâ. I could read the help page (I probably should), but they are sooo far off from my little brain that I canât even think of a possible explanation. My (possibly broken) intuition would categorize âMatchâ and âTermâ to be the same. Zero idea what âQuery Stringâ is supposed to be. But then I think a search should be so easy to use to not having to read up on it in a manual. Admittedly, the basic search works alright.
When âMatchâ is the default, why is it not selected? Similarly, when it searches all fields by default, why is â_allâ not selected? This technical spelling â_allâ with the leading underscore also doesnât look pleasing to my eyes. Itâs been a hell lot of time that I looked at the code base, so I forgot everthing by now, but that should be easy to fix.
Okay, three things. :-D Apart from the search results taking up soo much space, it would really be nice if the markdown would be rendered. Yes, this is probably very tricky, as the matching search terms are highlighted. So I imagine both the highlighting and markdown rendering probably contradict each other. Also, how to go about matches that are part of markdown link URLs, image alternative texts and the like. Not easy at all.
I reckon thatâs certainly not what you had in mind or wanted to hear. :-( Sorry about that. I doubt it myself if this is any helpful feedback.
No promises, but I try to toy around with the search more in the future. Maybe even look into the code base and see what I can do. The next weeks will be full of activities with the scouts, though. So donât expect something in the near future.
Is there something simpler, and leaner, than Gitea, which will allow me to see (as in read only) git repositories nicely on a web browser? Preferably a one-file-only solution, written in Golang.
@aelaraji@aelaraji.com hahahahaha! Good findings. Yes, most of them are invented, and medical/drug related. The kick with the German ones is that they summarise an entire paragraph, with not just meaning, but also feelings, andâhypotheticallyâhard to describe extra meanings rather difficult or impossible to translate to other languages.
my first twtxt from spain!!! wow im feeling good!
Wow, so pretty, dude! The one you used on this twt (tiny photo too, not sure what happened here) doesnât make justice to the entire set. Very good clicks there!
@aelaraji@aelaraji.com LOL. Thatâs pretty much it, and it just means âextraordinaryâ. đ€Ł
@bender@twtxt.net well there is âsupercalifragilisticexpialidociousâ!
I usualy hear people ask Harry Mack (a freestyle rapper) to include it in his freestyles. đ
@prologic@twtxt.net I think it happens more, and more, while on mobile. I use iCloud Private Relay, if that helps.
Now, donât misunderstand me. With all the perceived drawbacks/flaws I listed, Yarn works. Could it be much better? For sure. But it works. :-D
@sorenpeter@darch.dk Not bad, maybe letâs go back to 98.css. đ
@bender@twtxt.net It feels like the current cycle has been going on for a very long time now, almost 20 years. đ© But I might be wrong here, maybe it started later.
@eapl.me@eapl.me you wrote:
I donât use Yarn/Twtxt.net anymore, although I read the homepage a few times a week to catchup on anything interesting.
Then you do use it, no? Right? :-D
I barely twt from my PHP instance.
Because PHP sucks! See what I did? I am âencouragingâ engagement! :-D
⊠itâs too superficial to have a meaningful conversation.
Microblogging is often the antithesis of meaningful. You talk about everything, and anything you want. Even to the void. You have done it!
Yarn is niche. With itâs forks, and yarns, it comes across as a âweirdâ microblogging for some (weird was the word a friend from Philippines used to refer to Yarn). The UI/UX has issues (I am not an expert, but I would say copying âthe othersâ and slightly adjusting to give Yarn itâs own uniqueness should work), and that keeps people away. The cache blows, I want to be able to see everything, at all times. The built-in search blows, I want a more âala Googleâ kind of search. There is more, but you get the gist.
@prologic@twtxt.net standing up Mastodon isnât that much complicated. It is just a little bit more demanding than Yarn, thatâs all.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org âlooking forward to the next weekendâ; I see what you did there! :-D
@movq@www.uninformativ.de fear not! We know we are animals that do things on cycles. We also copy each other. Whatâs old becomes new, over and over. It is bound to end⊠eventually.
I am not fond of it either.
@prologic@twtxt.net and by âyâallâ you meant eapl, right? I noticed that too, and LOLed IRL. đ€Ł
Is this âflat UIâ madness ever going to end? Iâm beginning to lose hope.