

Yet another alternative is jsonata.org
Yet another alternative is jsonata.org
Honestly I don’t need to know anything about it at all except that it’s a payment system designed by GNU
Then you seem to know even less then you thought? GNU supports development, but each project is independently designed and developed. Taler’s roots are in academia.
Because it’s not a crypto-currency it is a lot more efficient: e.g. no need for wasteful proof-of-work or staking. So it certainly does not have all the downsides of crypto.
From what I gather, the licence is still in the spirit of open source
It’s not though. It’s wildly against it. The spirit of open source is that anyone can take open source code and use and modify it. This isn’t the case here.
Here is another prediction: the volume of that bet would be nowhere near where it needs to be to make the bet interesting.
Disagree? Create the bet yourself and prove me wrong.
If most people prefer pyproject.toml over requirements.txt, even if it does not support everything you need, isn’t it more likely that you will have to change workflow rather than python remaining stuck with requirement.txt?
I was asking why you need to have a centralized pyproject.toml file, which is apparently why you need constraint files? Most people don’t have this workflow, so are not even aware of constraint files, much less see them as a must-have.
Why do you need to have a centralized pyproject.toml?
My only use case so far has been fixing broken builds when a package has build-)ldependencies that don’t actually work (e.g. a dependency of a dependency breaks stuff). Not super common, but it happens.
But pyproject.toml supports neither locking nor constraints.
Constraints are useful for restricting build dependencies of your dependencies, especially if they follow PEP-518.
How does HATEOAS deal with endpoints that take arguments? E.g. I have an endpoint that merges the currently viewed resource with another one? Does it require a new (argumentless) endpoint showing a form where one can enter the second resource? Wouldn’t it be quite inefficient if you have to now do two (or more) requests instead of just one?
I really struggle to see where HATEOAS can be used. Obviously not for machine to machine uses as others have pointed out. But even for humans it would lead to terrible interfaces.
If the state of the resource changes such that the allowable actions available on that resource change (for example, if the account goes into overdraft) then the HTML response would change to show the new set of actions available.
So if I’m in overdraft, some actions are not available? Which means they are not shown at all? How can a user easily know that there are things they could do, it it wasn’t for the fact that they are in a specific state? Instead of having disabled buttons and menus, with help text explaining why they are not usable, we just hide them? That can’t be right, can it? So how do we actually deliver a useable UX using HATEOAS?
Or is it just meant for “exploration”, and real clients would not rely on the returned links? But how is that better than actual docs telling you the same but much more clearly ?
What do you mean by “screen grab”?
Seems like you do have an interest in Wayland, if it informs your choice of DE. Most users have no intetest in it, so they don’t care whether it’s there or not.