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This applies to more than just product engineering. Part of one of my former jobs (retired now) involved writing marketing copy and news releases. I never quite got over how one of my bosses, who would also write some of this material, often told visitors or other company execs that, where our textual output was concerned, “We have no pride of authorship here.” Speak for yourself, I always wanted to tell him, but never did because I needed the paycheck.

Interestingly, he lasted there only a year while I made it to nearly 17 years. Go figure.


thanks a lot for the story. I used to spend a lot of time trying to figure out how to create work groups that didn't force people into hiding their true needs, pride, creativity and efforts... but I really didn't have a minute left to pursue that goal. I know that some groups have healthier culture where people can live and work in a happy mental place .. but it seems they are a rare kind of exception.

For Sass, yes[0] --- as has Hugo[1]. Hugo's recently added `css.Build` function, based on esbuild, is for post-processing vanilla CSS.

[0]: https://www.getzola.org/documentation/content/sass/

[1]: https://github.com/gohugoio/hugo/releases/tag/v0.43 (July, 2018)


Author here. This post arose out of a recent thread on the Hugo Discourse:

https://discourse.gohugo.io/t/hugo-v0-158-0-released/56868


Good call out from that thread is he's trying to get a small change in esbuild added to help with this as well.

https://github.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/4419


Yes; hope that gets blessed. We shall see.

BTW, there's a glitch in your code snippet syntax highlighting; in Light mode, the 'p' selector is remaining an unreadable yellow.

Whoops. Thanks for the catch. I was trying to trim down some of my CSS the other day, but inadvertently forgot to leave my `--cyan-700` variable. The yellow you saw was supposed to warn me, "Hey, you missed one!" but I apparently missed that one. :-/ Fixed.

> Few people would have had their own TVs in their room 30 years ago. That wasn't common. They were huge, expensive, and not remotely interesting enough to capture the attention of most people for prolonged periods. It was common to have family rituals where there was about 2-3 hours of watching TV during/after dinner together. That was when they aired a movie after some news.

Depends on where one is from. In my country (U.S.A.), even many lower-middle-class kids tended to have at least a small portable TV (or, more often, the former family TV that had been replaced by a newer one in the living room) in at least their end of the house or apartment, if not their own room, ’way back in the late 1960s to early 1970s. What was common for kids in other countries at that time is, of course, a different matter. As for watching the TV together as a family rather than on separate TV sets: that often depended more on whether the family TV was a newer color model and the kids' room TV was an older black-and-white model --- or, as kids grew older and their viewing preferences changed from their parents’, which shows were on opposite one another. Sometimes it even came down to which room made it easier to watch TV while you were doing homework, talking to a friend who was visiting you from down the street, etc.


Same here about the TV's flyback transformer. My parents always wondered how I could hear from down the hall (out of sight from the TV) when the horizontal hold or vertical hold went awry. :-)

Reminds me a little of something I wrote once:

https://www.brycewray.com/posts/2021/01/easy-peasy/



> What is the key combo to make an emdash?

On macOS (and iPadOS if used with certain external keyboards), it has long been `Option` + `Shift` + `-`. Desktop publishing folks memorized this, and other, typographically helpful key combos many years ago.


Stylebot is no longer actively developed, but the similar (and open-source) Stylus extension is.

Repo: https://github.com/openstyles/stylus

Chrome extension: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/stylus/clngdbkpkpe...

Firefox extension: https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/styl-us/


One of the smartest people for whom I ever worked was fond of saying about such situations that “you almost never want to be the first one up the beach.” I saw him get that right over and over again.


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