Yes. Usually you have a brightness and sometimes also a proximity sensor. Proximity is usually used for phones so they can deactivate the screen if you hold the phone like an actual phone against your ear.
agressivelyPassive
Könnten wir etwas Kontext haben?
The sensors are usually pretty close to the camera, so the chances of taping over it are relatively high.
Again, did you actually read the comments?
Is SQL an API contract using JSON? I hardly think so.
Java does not distinguish between null and non-existence within an API contract. Neither does Python. JS is the weird one here for having two different identifiers.
Why are you so hellbent on proving something universal that doesn't apply for the case specified above? Seriously, you're the "well, ackshually" meme in person. You are unable or unwilling to distinguish between abstract and concrete. And that makes you pretty bad engineers.
Did you read the comments above?
You can't just ignore context and proclaim some universal truth, which just happens to be your opinion.
Nope.
If there's a clear definition that there can be something, implicit and explicit omission are equivalent. And that's exactly the case we're talking about here.
None. The project was ultimately cancelled for unrelated reasons.
I had lengthy discussions about that because two companies conventions collided.
We talked literally hours about the benefits of build numbers, branch specific identifiers and so on.
Even the relatively minor "trauma-rette" of hitting a soccer ball with your head is associated with permanent brain damage. Our brains were not made for being hit a bunch of times.
Ihr lacht, aber der Typ hat leider durchaus Publikum. In zwei drei Wochen werden euren schwierigen Onkel und Tanten genau das erzählen und fleißig AfD wählen, weil die Grünen ja schließlich die neue SA sind.
Exactly. Simple language is a thing. And for some people it's actually important.
If you're learning a language or have some form of learning disability, you simply can't understand "real" books.
Hell, there are books in my native language that I can barely read (Kant is about as nice as the name implies).
The real question is: how good is it? If 80% of nuance and details are lost, it may not be of use.
You can go and buy sodium batteries already. They're not competitive with Lithium ion batteries in many mobile applications, but very much competitive for everything where price is more important than size or weight.
Lithium has decades of research and industrial scaling behind it, it's hard to break into that. But especially sodium is on a pretty good path to replace it in large scale storage applications.