When working with AI coding agents, I like to create a worktree and let it run on it while I do my own thing.
Wrote this bash one-liner to quickly create a worktree and start Claude Code on it:
| Website | https://www.lucabernardi.com |
When working with AI coding agents, I like to create a worktree and let it run on it while I do my own thing.
Wrote this bash one-liner to quickly create a worktree and start Claude Code on it:
Prompting an LLM to support my learning process or help me grasp complex topics has become a practical exercise in metacognition and cognitive strategies awareness.
When approaching unfamiliar domains, I often ask it to provide examples and to use analogies and metaphors to scaffold understanding.
For example, during a rabbit hole on image tokenizers, an LLM was able to produce an insightful Formula 1 metaphor.
@overcastfm with the new design I see a difference in behavior when an episode that belongs to a playlist is marked as completed (or finished to play) it stays gray out in the playlist.
I don't seem to find a setting to bring back the old behavior where the episode will be removed from a playlist upon being completed.
Is this intentional?
There is a very special joy that comes from using well crafted Mac apps like Nova. It's fast, it's beautiful, it's a great platform citizen and it just feels good to use.
Does it have all the feature of VS code? No, but the one that it has are intentional and that's a strength.
I would choose any day to use something whose craftsmanship brings me join that having more features than I can really use.
Want to work on SwiftUI and Widgets? Excited to help define the future of app development? Pumped about shaping API design? Well you're in luck! I have 2 roles open on my team on SwiftUI at Apple! Note: these roles are in-office in Cupertino.
Early-career:
https://jobs.apple.com/en-us/details/200518283/swiftui-frameworks-widget-engineer?team=SFTWR
Later-career:
https://jobs.apple.com/en-us/details/200518263/senior-swiftui-frameworks-widget-engineer?team=SFTWR
Continuing on this line of thoughts I really enjoyed @maggie characterization as epistemic rubber ducks.
Her prototypes of interfaces beyond turn-based chat are so fascinating https://maggieappleton.com/lm-sketchbook.
I want these tools to help me think better, not think for me.