drdnl
Scissor for sure
I’d like to be able to say it’ll work, I’ve been gaming on Linux for years and just finished Doom Eternal at 5120x1440 at 120fps
But I have the previous generation top end cpu and gpu, 16 core something and a 5900xt iirc, so we can’t quite compare
One thing I did notice though is that your cpu seems weirdly overloaded? Or at least, the windows values are very different from the Linux ones? Are you dual booting? Or did you maybe reset something in the bios whilst switching?
Just wondering if you might be looking in the wrong place
Is that cpu one of those with an embedded gpu? That you’re maybe running the wrong hardware?
Nm, looked it up, it’s a mobile cpu, no idea unfortunately
A header might be useful, although there’s likely better ways to (not) document what each sql statement does.
But inline documentation? I’d suggest trying to work around that. Here’s an explanation as to why: https://youtu.be/Bf7vDBBOBUA
If possible, and as much as possible, things should simply make enough sense to be self documenting. With only the high level concepts actually documented. Everything else is at risk to be outdated or worse, confuse
My advice to learning test automation in this form is: don’t
Look up the testing trophy, try to do everything using any tool but Selenium until you absolutely have to. You’ll notice that you can come very far using integration tests, you’ll also notice the tests are fast and reliable. Something selenium tests rarely are.
For frontend, look at testing-library or storybook with test runners. Former is more lightweight but a hassle to debug, latter is heavier but much more visual and easy to maintain. Both are not flaky and fast and easy to run in a ci pipeline.
Run your tests as close as possible to the logic, you’ll get the quickest feedback.
Once you’re done with all this, make a happy flow E2E test or two. And I’d use typescript instead of Java. Then you have some hope of a frontend dev wanting to help you maintain it. And playwright instead of selenium, simply more modern and thought out