I use rebase when I'm working in a dev branch. If someone else has pushed changes to the main branch, rebasing the dev branch on top of main is a way to do the hard work of resolving merge conflicts up front. Then I can rerun tests and make sure everything still works with changes from the main branch. And finally, when it is time to merge my dev branch to main, it's a simple fast-forward.
That picture makes me nervous. What if someone else is coming from the other direction?
To me, the culture shock would be that there is a bicycle that costs $15K
The ones that get me are captchas saying select all squares with motorcycles when it is clearly a bicycle.
You could use a web browser. Just navigate to docs.python.org
The price, obviously. However, I'd also worry about the screen cracking where it folds.
Thank goodness, although I usually read the docs in devdocs.io, which has a dark theme.
I use SEE Finance.
GnuCash looks like it could be a good open source alternative but I haven't gotten around to switching to it yet.
RIP Bram.
I've been using Vim for 3 decades under multiple OSes and I think this software has had the most impact on my daily workflow.
I'm using Sync, while waiting for Boost.
I use yadm. It's a wrapper around git with a few extra commands for dotfile management.