If the argument is that most developers can't understand what a DI system does, I don't know if I buy that. Or is the argument it's hard to track down dependencies? Because if that's the case the idiomatic c# has the dependencies declared right in the ctor.
The point is not that Prusas need constant repair. The point is that they are reliable workhorses and repairable and usually also long-term-upgradeable.
I'll note that in the US that 1000+ is the "list price". For those paying out of pocket, both zepbound and wegovy offer coupons available to anyone taking it down to $500 (and I'll note that discounted price keeps coming down, slowly, as well)
C# InterpolatedString is very close, with the twisty bit being that C# can rely on static typing for safety so the "f-string" and "t-string" variants use the same literal syntax and depend on what function they are passed to, whereas in both Python and Javascript they have different literal syntaxes. Python chose to use a different literal prefix to its literals ("f" versus "t") and Javascript chose to use a function-call syntax as prefix (`templateString` versus html`templateString` where html is a function in scope).
For the case like here it’s closer to FormattableString that’s what EF Core’s composable FromSql method works on top of. Both address custom interpolation but from different angles / for different scenarios.
But...restricted reach is exactly how Bluesky works. People you follow show up in your feed, and only them. You can look at other feeds that are not as restricted, but you are making that choice.
... but I think the argument goes "Signal can be used for unclassified communication, so we are OK"... great! .... but why were specific war plans and CIA officer names NOT classified? There are definite problems either way you slice it.
Precisely. See also: TACO