3/28:The Retracked Library

kyo
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IPFS
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illustration by Hiroyuki Izutsu

This is the Weekly Review on 3/22-3/28.

When I went to work on Monday, I found that my mood was a little different from before. To put it simply, I had a little excitement. This is a rare situation. The recent situation is probably not bad!

The epidemic continues to have a fever, and I can't help but worry about taking the MRT. Now, if you don't wear a mask when you commute, you probably don't know how many people will be scorned. When I arrived at the company, the alcohol and heat sensors at the door reminded you that it was an emergency. As soon as the elevator door opened, the Jiugongge, which was pasted with yellow packing tape on the ground, made me speechless—there was obviously no way out.


As the library wants to borrow more and more books, it can no longer be tolerated to manually track the status of "books to be borrowed". Before, I clearly wrote a website to solve this pain point, but because Google's network space expired, I felt a little lazy to move the project to a new space, because it had to be redeployed. On the other hand, I want to refactor with Django, so it has not been launched for a long time.

Helpless, the need is urgent, so I hurriedly used the off-get off work time to delete, delete, modify and modify it, and firstly put the simplified version on the shelves for personal use. Next, I will write a short article to introduce the Xingtian Palace Library, and recommend my own project by the way. In fact, it has been written before: Python Flask web service for obsessive readers. The article also mentions the library. However, I have recently discovered a useful book exploration function, so I will make up for it.

Looking back at the code at that time, the rough usage of "style=" appears in the HTML part of the web page, and I can't help but smile.

Hours of study this week: 8 hours 43 minutes


Highlights of the week

The name of "Steel Alchemist" should not need me to say more. People in the animation industry call it "a masterpiece without dead ends": it has a rigorous structure and is linked end to end. I also watched LexBurner's introduction and watched this animation while preparing for a lawyer.

In all fairness, I don't particularly like this work, and one or two of the theme songs are quite common. In fact, all the OP and ED of this one are also considered to be a collection of masterpieces. My favorite used to be OP3: Golden Time Lover, and this OP2 had a mediocre response. I heard it again by chance, but it became the most played track this week.

It seems that listening to music also has to pay attention to the timing of the frequency with your frequency.

It's the pantry again! In fact, I finished listening to this episode at about the same time as last week's episode 89, but I didn't want to recommend 2 materials from the same source in a week, so I deliberately staggered it.

This should be the most useful episode of this show that I have heard so far, because it happens to be about writing workers, that is, writing, rather than other creative methods, so I am particularly impressed.

If you're too lazy to listen, I might as well tell you the biggest point of the whole episode, which is "Keep writing, don't stop." The so-called personal style belongs only to those who persevere.

At first glance, it's another software engineer's content, well, it is. In principle I would try to avoid something that is only useful to engineers, unless it is really important and there are some common elements that everyone can learn from.

Yes! At least it mentioned that it is very practical to use the keynote that comes with macOS to make text maps! I think plain text images are a fairly frequent demand. Before I got Medium Featured pages, in order to make decent text images, I was looking for tools for a long time. At this time, I can't help but envy the designer. For a designer, it should not even be called drinking water to be a text map without any pattern.

Back to the engineer's perspective, I think the most useful is this paragraph:

In addition, in recent years, the trend of quizzing has become popular. Many beginners have not yet laid a good foundation, and they foolishly learn how to quiz with others. I think this is not very beneficial. Why not? Because the basics have not yet been laid, you will go to the problem, which is probably the same as when you were in high school when you were writing college mathematics problems. If you encounter a problem and find that you can’t, just learn the solution for this problem; after you finish the study, you encounter the next problem If not, you can only learn the solution for that problem again. Once you come across a problem you haven't seen before, you can't solve it at all, because you learn to solve the problem, not the problem.

There is a good saying "because you learn to solve methods, not problems." Math teachers in middle school seem to say this very often? I didn’t do any special questions before applying for a job. It’s not that I didn’t want to, but there are other more important things to do in the order of preparations, and it’s really boring to just brush the questions, just like you are trying to memorize a one-word book. .

But from another perspective, there is still value in practicing questions. It is like "weight training" in the programming world. Who doesn't want to add a little muscle to the logical brain?

Executive review this week

Reading: "How to read a book" after reading the second part "The third level of reading, analytical reading", a total of 7 chapters

Completion: 2/5

Chapter 7 has only read the first 3 chapters, and it is due in a week. There's nothing particularly difficult about this book, but it's just hard to read quickly. There are many parts that need to be mobilized for understanding, and sometimes I read it as a kind of "enjoyment".

Some say the book is "long-winded", and an important point may be repeatedly emphasized.

This is true, but what I find amazing is that, albeit repeatedly, a different angle is used each time to help you build a more complete picture of understanding - and the author knows exactly what he's doing.

Programming: Complete Chapter 8 of the Django Book, and read Chapter 9

Completion: 0

Books were barely opened this week. I am writing the front-end at work, and I am working on a side project after get off work. It can only be said that the things that are not in a hurry may not be well done.

Nian's work status this week is okay, so I don't care.

next week to do list

Pause for a week.

Look at the implementation this week, and next week just happens to be the Qingming holiday again, so I don't ask for it.

It's a holiday!

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