Considering a day's worth of calories varies by person and that the general recommendation is 2,000 calories per day for an average, active adult I would question this idea
There is no good way to outpace calorie consumption with activity. It is far far easier for humans to consume usable calories than it is for us to spend them.
In our ancestors this meant that we were able to go a long time between good meals during times of scarcity and still survive, but today it just means that if you're worried about calories you should start in the kitchen, not the gym
Most annoying thing for me is being unable to filter businesses out of my search results. I cannot tell you how many times I have been looking for coffee shops and had to scroll past dozens of gas stations that sell coffee. It's also a problem that I can't filter out fast food or massive chains. Yes Starbucks is a coffee shop, but if I want something small or local I'm shit out of luck on Google maps because they dominate my results.
This is such a simple feature for a SEARCH ENGINE COMPANY to implement but I'm sure they don't want to risk upsetting potential ad revenue by allowing users to filter out the advertisers business.
Well so before you code it you still have an idea of what you want the program to do, right? So you write a test for the program to pass or fail based on that idea of functionality, and then you write the program to pass the test.
So for something simple like programming a calculator you might write test code that verifies whether your addition function properly adds two numbers together then write the actual addition function.
Later on as you continue to build the program your addition test will still be out there verifying that you haven't broken anything with subsequent code.
Some people will tell you that TDD tends to work better with established codebases in corporate environments where you have huge interrelated programs and maybe hundreds or even thousands of developers working concurrently as opposed to simple projects or startups where you might want to prioritize having a product set out before you start to implement rigorous testing requirements.
A lot of people don't like TDD because they see it as extra overhead and don't want to spend time writing test code when they could be writing "real code."
Proponents of TDD tend to point to the fact that it contributes to stability in the overall codebase and allows you to quickly and easily find and diagnose problems, and it can make you a better developer to think ahead rather than just dumping code into the codebase and assuming it's going to work.
Kind of funny that Galante was programming slot machines prior to making the game as there's a lot of aspects of VS I've always thought were just great at triggering that good old reward circuit in the brain.
ITT people who are dying to tell you about all the sexy sex they are having/had thinking that their experience invalidates years of research the article is commenting on
The recalls cover certain 2023 and 2024 Hyundai Palisades, as well some 2023 Tucson, Sonata, Elantra and Kona vehicles. Affected Kias include the 2023 Soul and Sportage as well as some 2023 and 2024 Seltos vehicles.
The article does indicate that animals were sensitive to the noises:
"It did have its flaws: people found that jingling keys or coins could be picked up by the TV’s microphones and accidentally change the channel, and the high-pitch frequencies from the remote were discernible by pets."
When people say they "enjoy reading" they are almost certainly not saying they "enjoy dragging their eyes across a page of text." If you're getting the content into your brain, you're reading!
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I was wrong. I actually have no idea, but it looks like some other commenters got it right 🙃
I know nothing about this movie except that it's apparently a fun time. Can someone please tell me what makes the Barbie Movie "woke" just for the sake of context?
I'm not just talking about mom and pop stores though. Even Barnes and Noble is out priced, and, although it wasn't in my initial question, other smaller online-only retailers like thriftbooks and bookshop are also handily undercut by Amazon.
I'm not implying you're wrong, just that there's probably more to the picture here. I think volume and slim margins probably have a lot to do with it here as Amazon probably makes a handy profit on sales of non-book goods (and let's not forget that their product sales aren't even what makes them money, it's their cloud services) and as another commenter said Amazon passes some of the infrastructure costs on to the sellers.
How do I even find other instances? Not trying to sound like a turd, I just legitimately haven't looked into it at all yet