I always thought of the "how" being better explained by the code itself where you can see string.replace(" ", "\ ") as the actual fix while the message says the "why".
I would still have "Fix a bug where strings containing whitespace break CSVExporter" as my go to message.
I guess our viewpoints are different based whether we want the commit messages to represent tasks or changes. They both have their uses of course. Looking at changes to a file to know what people have done to it is better with a "changes" type message but looking at the history to check "did we actually complete this or was it just marked as completed in the issue tracker?" is better with a task based message.
Task management where every issue is put on a ticket and tracked would my type of messages obsolete but at my current company theyre very useful.
That's a tad bit difficult since Hezbollah military rivals that of the Lebanese government. This is pretty much an impossible request and him saying that he's going to cause Lebanon "destruction and suffering"
I like good commit messages that use less words but still give the full picture. If something hacky was done then a comment is better. I like mine with imperative voice since it avoids writing a prose.
Not a tanky or China apologist but it's actually doing fine (not great but very well might be soon).
Here's the information you're looking for. China is doing a lot of things right and is ahead of schedule. They're making good progress on electrification and their renewables are growing exponentially at an insane rate.
They're still addicted to coal but with the developments in solar and wind and a very large geography and energy storage programs they're going to be phased out and really fast in the coming years.
Given the fact that they're pretty much producing everything for western economies and is recently industrialised China is actually doing fine. They emit a lot less per person than the average European while producing goods for 2x their population.
It might sound weird but China is one of the countries that's actually taking climate change seriously.
Here are a couple that I didn't see mentioned here.
The Bear
Ted Lasso
Solo Levelling
Dirk Gently holistic detective
The Office
Attack on Titan
Code Geass Lelouch Rebellion
Severance
Bojack Horseman
I just finished Good Omens also, it's great but the first episode is not because it's all setup. It's a Terry Pratchett story that I think I'll recommend that one for a long time.
"Most" in more than a simple majority in my understanding of English as a non-native speaker. "More" would be a better word for it. I'd also take "single player is the most popular" of two game modes which is true but still implies more than 6% difference.
West Bank and Gaza are separate governments. Israel made a contract with Jordan Valley farmers to get their water rights in exchange for a steady water supply that they never delivered. Then after a while because they couldn't farm without water they told them "your land is unused so we're going to use it for a settlement".
There is water in the West Bank but it's not reliable since Israelis need to water their crops first.
Big part of Palestinians are Christian and their doing fine. Homosexuality is currently not legal and we don't know if independent Palestine would have fixed it on not because Israel forbids them from holding elections. Same applies to most other issues, but one thing is for sure that they will have better agriculture and trade and more opportunities as a free country. Israel is essentially blockading Gaza and West Bank gets double tariffs and no water for farming.
Niche sport that's very hard to become pro in