Yup. I think a lot of the devs that started with React jumped straight into the "fun" stuff without learning some of the "boring" fundamentals.
And those devs set the wrong patterns and standards for others following hot behind them. The only time I can remember needing to dress a div up like a button was when an accordion trigger was just a giant button and anything passed in would be rendered inside, but I needed an action to the right of the trigger title. But those happen super rarely. You can't just pass in a button as it was invalid html to have nested buttons obviously. Yes, I know I could probably use css to absolutely position it or something but that takes it out of the flow and starts hacking about it in another way.
Yep, it just works seamlessly. Sure, it hangs sometimes, but their UI allows you to retry or undo changes to an earlier point in the conversation easily. The autocompletion is nice as well and pretty satisfying to tab through the small and menial things when refactoring.
(Edit: There is another long thread that contains an image that I thought was the seahorse emoji (although apparently the seahorse emoji doesn't exist...but i thought this was it so I don't know what is going on...) https://www.reddit.com/r/Retconned/comments/1di3a1m/comment/...)
The yellow one is exactly what I pictured. This is pretty surreal for me, because it's the first time one of these Mandela Effect things applied to me personally.
Are we certain that it didn't exist though? Unicode only got emoji in 2014, after ~5 year standardization effort. There were many different, incompatible formats around for about a decade before that, plus non-emoji like Kaoani.
Perhaps there was a seahorse somewhere that never made it to Unicode.
Or maybe people are just misremembering - perhaps mistaking the emoji for a unicorn or a chess's knight piece as a seahorse.
I wonder if the phone has an auto volume off feature after no sound plays after n minutes? I have an app on my mac called AutoMute that does similar, but it just mutes my mac whenever my headphones get disconnected.
True, but it's for my forgetful self where I raised the volume on the mac speakers to play something aloud, then plug in my earphones and play some death metal only to get up and walk away quickly accidentally yanking it out. At least 10 years ago it would continue playing the music at whatever volume I had the mac speakers on.