Jason Novinger
Backend (and sometimes frontend) software engineer working on sports data at Elias Sports Bureau.
Experience with: Python, Django, Typescript/JS, infrastructure, databases
Find me:
- Github: github.com/jnovinger
- Mastodon: https://mastodon.social/@jnovinger
- 181 Posts
- 27 Comments
Crap, now I need to know about competitive Jenga …
- Jason Novinger@programming.devMtoPython@programming.dev•Doing language agnostic automated unit test generation with LLMs and contextually aware mutation testing to remove code vulnerabilities1·10 个月前
Reported as spam. I tend to agree. Removing.
Hey Ulrik, apologies for not responding sooner.
I’m more than happy to talk about adding one (or more!) mods for any of the communities I mod for right now, including c/python. I have at least one person in mind, who has been pretty active both in c/python and c/django. I’d also like to talk more about mod expectations, particularly with regard to reported posts/comments.
- Jason Novinger@programming.devOPMtoDjango@programming.dev•[Accepted] Django Enhancement Proposal 14: Background Workers1·11 个月前
That’s the way I read the proposal, which I definitely like.
- Jason Novinger@programming.devtoProgramming@programming.dev•Looking for feedback/review on my project starter template (DRF + Nuxt + Docker compose)3·1 年前
I haven’t had a chance to look yet, but I’m using a pretty similar stack at, although with React instead of Nuxt/Vue. I definitely love using Docker, at least as a dev platform, because of the way it evens the field across OS’s and makes it easy to onboard new contributors. Will definitely take a closer look when I get more time.
Buuut … I do mod the [email protected] community, which you might be interested in checking out. There’s also the [email protected], which is also worth checking out.
- Jason Novinger@programming.devOPMtoPython@programming.dev•bruin-data/ingestr: ingestr is a CLI tool to copy data between any databases with a single command seamlessly.6·1 年前
Reading the docs and I’m a little disappointed to see that disabling telemetry is opt-in: https://bruin-data.github.io/ingestr/getting-started/telemetry.html#disabling-telemetry.
- Jason Novinger@programming.devtoWeb Development@programming.dev•Send Web Push Notifications from your own Server2·1 年前
Thanks, I appreciate the reply and openness to doing things besides just video.
- Jason Novinger@programming.devtoWeb Development@programming.dev•Send Web Push Notifications from your own Server13·1 年前
Do you have a written version?
I really dislike having to watch an entire video to catch the one bit of useful information. I wish I had the time to watch entire videos, but honestly, I don’t. On top of that, my brain has often wandered off well before I get to the interesting bit.
Love it. Thanks for the improvement!
- Jason Novinger@programming.devto[Dormant] Electric Vehicles (Moved to [email protected])@lemmy.world•Ford is cutting F-150 Lightning production due to waning demand2·1 年前
There’s a brake pedal, but it’s almost never needed (and if it is, it’s always been because of me being stupid). Releasing the accelerator engages the regenerative breaking, up to and including coming to a stop. I love it and don’t ever want to go back.
Having said that, I have had zero problem adapting back to normal breaking in my wife’s car (ICE) when I need to drive it for some reason.
I really don’t understand people that complain about the 1-pedal driving.
Looking at the docs, it looks like it’s an instance of
ID3Tags
, which appears to be based on couple of helper classesmutagen._util.DictProxy
andmutagen._tags.Tags
, whereDictProxy
(and its baseDictMixin
) provides the dict-like interface. Underneath that, it looks like it’s storing the actual values in a simpledict
(DictProxy.__dict
) and proxying to that.I’m not seeing anything obvious that would muck with the incoming lookup key anywhere in
ID3Tags
orDictProxy.__getitem__
or any of the other base classes.I have to jump off to pack for a trip, but might try this out later in a live shell session to see if there’s something odd going on with the API.
In the meantime, OP, are you positive you were looking at the same file each time? Was this in a script or in a live Python shell session?
- Jason Novinger@programming.devtoADHD@lemmy.world•I just completed a task (setting a certain appointment) that I had been putting off for about TWO MONTHS.English4·1 年前
I don’t have much to say besides, good job. We all believe in you.
- Jason Novinger@programming.devtoADHD@lemmy.world•PSA: Fire Your Pharmacy and Find One That Respects and Takes Care of YouEnglish192·1 年前
Anecdata here in the US, but my local mom and pop pharmacy (which I love) currently would lose $200/mo on my vyvanse because of my insurance and the whole generic vyvanse nonsense. This system sucks.
For the time being, I fill my vyvanse at Walgreens and hope they’re losing $200/mo on it. I fill everything else at the mom and pop, until they let me know the situation is better.
- Jason Novinger@programming.devOPMtoPython@programming.dev•time-machine: Travel through time in your tests.1·2 年前
Includes pytest integration: https://github.com/adamchainz/time-machine#pytest-plugin
This proved to be a fair amount of work, absent a bot of some sort that I haven’t had time to create yet.
So, I failed toward just including events in the sidebar, with a link to python.org’s Event Calendar.
Ha! Great catch. Yeah, I’ll get that sorted.
Let me know if you have things to add!