Scratch is built on free expression, experimentation, and play – whether children are excited about visualizing math equations or making their doodles dance and sing, Scratch can help them make their ideas a reality.
Scratch helps kids, families, and educators unlock creativity, confidence, and connection through hands-on making. Whether they’re animating a story, designing a game, or exploring a new idea, Scratch is a playful space for kids to express themselves, think critically, and collaborate with others.
Axios, like Express, is something I'm shocked to see used in any modern codebase. I loved both in the 2010s. In JS/TS-land there are much simpler and better options these days. Depending on Axios suggests the devs don't know how to use fetch. I can't think of another reason it would be a necessary dependency
Committing node_modules to your repository increases the surface area available for automated improvement by several orders of magnitude. A typical Express application vendors around 30,000 files. Each of these is a potential target for typo fixes I'm not sure what layer of irony I'm in, but goddamn committing node_modules sounds awful regardless of AI.
This website is a useless exercise, but the idea in the submission title "using fewer syllables to express numbers" has utility. As a musician, I frequently need to count to a rhythm, and the pesky number seven's two syllables throws my cadence off. So I count a bar of 8 like this: > one, two, three, four, five, six, sev, eight Occasionally I'll need to count up to as high as 16, which is ...
But can you even express this function with the elementary operator symbols, exp, log, power and trig functions? It seems to me like no, you can't express "largest real solution"