I always like to joke in coding interviews that I really like to make variable names as long as I can so they are very precisely named. Then when I get to a double nested loop I hit them with iterator and jiterator instead of I and j
Sam
Is them some nipple rings in your pockets?
Just want to mention that this is SOME of the roots of that tree. A mature sequoia’s roots can cover up to AN ACRE
Essentially if it doesn’t Have four legs it will wobble when in standing position. The four leg desks need four hydraulic lifts instead of two so they’re quite a bit more expensive so I went with one with two center mounted lifts.
Well stainless steel pans for one. Baking sheets that have a bunch of shit baked on to them. I cleaned off my stock pot as well with it. The bottom of any pot or pan that has a bunch of blackened crud on it.
And even if it didn’t help my chances directly like that, even getting a small chuckle would help me be more comfortable and confident.
What do those lines even mean?
No it’s usually cloudy with air bubbles from dissolved gasses
I don’t have any 100% pictures cause I completed it at the same as my wife had our second baby and then started a new job at basically the same time and it was immediately a total mess.
It’s LVP and pretty silent. This brand has a sort of honeycomb rubber backing that makes it all quite stable.
When I’m doing coding interviews I always like to start off and say I’m a big fan of very long variable names. “As descriptive as you can be” I say. Then I get to my first for loop. Instead of i I use “iterator” and then when I start a nested loop I use “jiterator” and it always gets a laugh.
What a surprising result!