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"Aerith Impregnated Repeatedly" Released! In this 1 minute loop scene, Aerith sits back and lets a hugger fill her up, and then the fruits of its labor squirm out. Aerith (VA): — 𝙺𝚒𝚝𝚝𝚎𝚗𝚅𝚘𝚡 ✶ 𝙽𝚂𝙵𝚆 𝚅𝙰 🔞 Aerith Model: MokujinH🔞 #rule34 #alien #facehugger #oviposition #nsfw #parody

224,992 görüntüleme • 8 ay önce •via X (Twitter)

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Why did so many languages copy async/await from C#? Anders Hejlsberg(Anders Hejlsberg) - creator of TypeScript, C# & Turbo Pascal - on what they got right with the design: #1 - async/await was designed to solve a common problem in the event-loop model: "A lot of languages are built around cooperative multitasking in the sense that they have an event loop that sits and dispatches events. Then you handle the event and then you yield back to the event handler loop. And it all runs in a single thread cooperatively. The problem with that is if you then want to do some long running work: how do I stop in the middle of this piece of long running work and yield back to the event loop cooperatively? And then when my result is ready, I can come back and continue executing here." #2 - state machines are the solution, but hard to build: "Well, in order to do that in an inverted architecture like that, you have to build a state machine. State machines are notoriously hard for people to implement because you've got to move all of your state off of the stack into objects. And then you have this big case statement that envelopes your entire logic. It's a nightmare to figure out. But, the transformation from serially executing code into a state machine, its continuation-passing-style translation is actually one that you can do in a machine-based fashion." #3 - compilers are good at writing state machines: "You can have the compiler write the state machine if you introduce syntax that allows you to indicate where you want to yield. And that's what await is. Await is basically saying, I want to yield here, and I want to yield this promise, and then when the promise completes, I want you to come back here and continue executing. Then the compiler writes a state machine around it and it actually turns it into this big switch statement and moves all of the state that survives across the await into something that's heap allocated. So it can be brought back. And doing all of that work is something that compilers are great at. And so that was sort of the idea that we have this new style of programming where we're using promises or the equivalent of promises and the ability to yield and then we have callbacks. But trying to write your program in that style, that's also what JavaScript suffered from a lot. It's like all this callback style stuff. With Async and Await, you get the illusion that you're just writing normal sequential code and then the compiler does the painful transformation for you. That turns out to be really useful."

The Pragmatic Engineer

13,258 görüntüleme • 28 gün önce

This time of year and throughout June, babies are often found out alone in the day, and here's why. Hedgehogs are nocturnal, but babies are born diurnal, meaning they can be awake in the daytime and feed from mum while she sleeps, and mum can go out at night to find food, knowing her babies will be safely sleeping. Isn't that so clever? This is baby Figgy and she's just 3 weeks old. Her eyes and ears opened a week ago, she's now able to lap, and she has little nubs of teeth starting to erupt. Everything is new and exciting at this age, and while mum is asleep babies like Figgy sometimes sneak out, to look around. Nosing around on brand new wobbly legs, learning how to scratch the itch of new spines growing through, and exploring a world of scents, babies usually quickly wear themselves out and safely return home to the nest. But now and again there's one who is just a bit too adventurous for her own good, and strays too far from the nest and can't find her way back home. So if you ever spot a baby out on the lawn, crying - this sounds like a little bird cheeping - please quietly approach and without touching or speaking just observe her for a minute. If she has any obvious injury or has flies attracted to her, immediately take her indoors and make up a hot water bottle with hot tap water, cover with a fleece and lay her on it, with another fleece covering her, then urgently ring a rescue (NEVER a vet) for advice. They will talk you through what to do. If she appears fine, with no flies, go back indoors (or an average garden length away, if she can't be seen from indoors) and just watch her from there for 20 minutes. Don't take your eyes off her, and be ready to quickly go out if a bird or animal goes near her. In most cases her crying will wake mum who will come out and carry her home. If you know *for sure* where the nest is, wearing gloves gently pick her up and quickly put her back as close to the nest as you can without disturbing it. If mum doesn't come within 20 minutes, go out and stand by the baby while you phone a rescue (NEVER a vet) and ask for advice. They will talk you through what to do. NB. This footage was from a couple of years ago and baby Figgy grew into a beautiful adult and was released back to the wild, and is still doing well.🥰

Hedgehog Cabin

14,638 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

🚨BREAKING: An ICE agent threatened to kill a U.S. citizen for driving through a neighborhood, in Cold Spring, Minnesota. In the video, a woman is in her car when an agent walks towards her, with his hand on his gun, in the middle of the street. He tells her that if she comes near him with her car, it will be “the last thing that you do.” In other words… a federal agent just threatened to execute a U.S. citizen for driving down a public street. She immediately points out that she wasn’t even close to him and tells him to get out of the road. Instead, the agent escalates. He stands directly in front of her vehicle, hand still on his gun, and tells her she cannot reverse or leave the street. Except there’s just one problem… He never identifies a crime. He never states a lawful order. He simply blocks her car and starts issuing threats. That’s an illegal detention. Then, he contradicts himself… He told her she can’t back up… and seconds later screams at her to “back the f*ck up.” The agent then walks to the side of her car and begins shining a flashlight directly into her face, with his hand still on his gun. When she tells him to get the light out of her face and back off, he moves directly in front of her car again and repeats the threat: “Do not hit me. This is your first and last warning.” Again… she hasn’t moved. Her car is still in reverse, and she repeatedly tells him to take his hand off his gun. She even says: “I’m not going to hit you!” And yet, the agent keeps escalating, screaming the same accusation over and over… as if he’s trying to manufacture a justification to shoot her. This is the exact same tactic we’ve already seen in multiple shootings involving ICE/Border Patrol… where federal agents step in front of vehicles and then claim they feared for their lives when the driver tries to leave, like they told them to do. Blocking a vehicle, threatening deadly force, illegally detaining a citizen, and creating a scenario where a shooting can be justified after the fact… Is not only dangerous, it’s illegal. Because when armed federal agents start threatening to kill people for driving down their own street, more people are eventually going to end up dead… And they will call it “self-defense.” And removing Kristi Noem isn’t going to change that.

Jesus Freakin Congress

415,263 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce