This honestly just looks like a bunch of ChatGPT output. There’s almost no code (I checked maybe half a dozen topics). Not sure how useful this is for anyone besides the author. Why would I look at this instead of asking an LLM?
I would guess that most folks would consider a bunch of problem prompts with no reference solutions to be not so useful. How would you check your understanding? How would you know if you were writing go code which would be frowned upon by industry veterans?
And on top of that, putting these in AGENTS.md makes no sense whatsoever. You’ll simply waste tokens and confuse the hell out of your agents. I wonder if gp assumed this is another repo of design patterns without reading anything there at all. Pasting a bunch of design patterns into AGENTS.md may not be the brightest idea either but at least that isn’t absurd.
GP didn’t say processed foods, but I can see why you went there because it’s a good point. That said, there are also those of us who can’t function without carbs (e.g. if I don’t eat them I will be too weak to work out or run, get light-headed, etc.).
That doesn’t mean they have to be processed, though, or that it requires gaining weight along with them. I personally survive primarily off of clean meats and homemade sourdough bread (which has literally 4 ingredients). If I cut out the bread I get hypoglycemic after runs and pass out. And with it, my weight stays around the same (though I’ve lost maybe 30lb in the last year or so due to just running more and lifting less).
Edit: and when I say “clean meats” I do not mean “lean” meats. Plenty of saturated fats. My bloodwork and other vitals are probably the best my doctor sees all year.
Well, yeah, I have no problem with carbs from fruit so long as they aren't causing issues (which to me they do, but that is a me problem, not a general indication).
No, fiat currency has allowed our money supply to track closer to our GDP, preventing currency shortages and price manipulation by foreign adversaries, giving us the most stable economy the world has ever experienced over the last 50 years. Yes, it can be abused (and some Asian countries have taken this to dangerous extremes), but it’s better than all the alternatives so far.
I didn’t think negative amounts were a real thing in double-entry accounting? Instead some things are debits and others are credits, and whether each of those reduces or increases an account balance depends on the type of account it’s against. Like, you could pay an expense out of a debt account, which would increase the debt, or out of a cash account, which would decrease the cash. Debits and credits should still be equal, though.
But not always. In a liability account, - means debit. And whether you show the balance itself as a positive or negative can be situational. I just find it more confusing for no good reason tbh. This is like intro to accounting stuff anyone would learn in college.
I can identify with this a lot. I don’t budget as religiously as I used to, but there was a time where I was writing little console apps to process all my recurring stuff and adding one-offs in from a separate file to help project future money. I turned the idea into a website, but really nobody ever used it but me. Shut it down probably a decade ago, and then found YNAB myself, but for the time period it reduced my anxiety by a lot.
Nay, work is one of the pillars of a fulfilling life. Though for most of humanity relative freedom to choose what work one does is more of a modern achievement, the original commandment (“be fruitful”) was so general it might suggest God knew what he was talking about.
I think of an amount like $10m as “retire well, leave some for the next generation” kind of money. $100m is more like, “retire well, leave passive income for N future generations.” That extra 10x is super compelling.
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