- Delete unused or obsolete files when your changes make them irrelevant (refactors, feature removals, etc.), and revert files only when the change is yours or explicitly requested. If a git operation leaves you unsure about other agents' in-flight work, stop and coordinate instead of deleting.
- Before attempting to delete a file to resolve a local type/lint failure, stop and ask the user. Other agents are often editing adjacent files; deleting their work to silence an error is never acceptable without explicit approval.
- NEVER edit
.envor any environment variable files—only the user may change them. - Coordinate with other agents before removing their in-progress edits—don't revert or delete work you didn't author unless everyone agrees.
- Moving/renaming and restoring files is allowed.
- ABSOLUTELY NEVER run destructive git operations (e.g.,
git reset --hard,rm,git checkout/git restoreto an older commit) unless the user gives an explicit, written instruction in this conversation. Treat t
| " ~/.idea-lazy.vim | |
| " LazyVim mappings for Jetbrains IDEs | |
| " Required plugins. https://plugins.jetbrains.com/bundles/7-ideavim-bundle | |
| " IDEAVim | |
| " Which-Key | |
| " IdeaVim-Sneak | |
| " To install, add this to the top of your ~/.ideavimrc: |
I get asked pretty regularly what my opinion is on merge commits vs rebasing vs squashing. I've typed up this response so many times that I've decided to just put it in a gist so I can reference it whenever it comes up again.
I use merge, squash, rebase all situationally. I believe they all have their merits but their usage depends on the context. I think anyone who says any particular strategy is the right answer 100% of the time is wrong, but I think there is considerable acceptable leeway in when you use each. What follows is my personal and professional opinion:
| # Change these variables as necessary. | |
| main_package_path = ./cmd/example | |
| binary_name = example | |
| # ==================================================================================== # | |
| # HELPERS | |
| # ==================================================================================== # | |
| ## help: print this help message | |
| .PHONY: help |
| def paginate(method, **kwargs): | |
| client = method.__self__ | |
| paginator = client.get_paginator(method.__name__) | |
| for page in paginator.paginate(**kwargs).result_key_iters(): | |
| for result in page: | |
| yield result | |
| # usage: | |
| import boto3 |
| # This isn't so much of a script as it is a placeholder for something I don't want to forget | |
| wget -qO- https://ip-ranges.amazonaws.com/ip-ranges.json | jq '.prefixes[] | if .region == "us-east-1" then .ip_prefix else empty end' -r |
If you're using a high-end bluetooth headset on your Macbook Pro it's likely your mac is using an audio codec which favors battery efficiency over high quality. This results in a drastic degradation of sound, the SBC codec is the likely culprit, read more about it here.

