I'm not sure how Reflex 2 works exactly, but it doesn't improve frame rate, only latency, unlike conventional VR reprojction, which improves both (or at least camera frame rate). So apparently it's not quite the same.
One of my biggest gripes with python is the fact that the only way to create a local scope for variables is with functions.
I understand if statements not having their own scope for simplicity's sake, but the fact that `with` blocks don't is simply mind-bobbling to me.
```
with open("text.txt", 'w') as f:
f.write("hello world")
f.write("hello world") # at least the handle was automatically closed so it will give an IO error
```
It’s actually very useful to have context managers outlive their with blocks. They are not only used for files:
One example would be a timing context manager:
with Timer() as t:
…
print(t.runtime)
Another example is mocks, where you want to inspect how many times a mock was called and with what arguments, after the mock context manager has finished.
I know it makes sense in the "scope-less" python philosopy but it still feels weird for me as a scope (ab)user in C++ and has caused me one headache or two in the past
Yeah, I think it's all those iframes. I'm seeing something weird on my Linux desktop - all the godbolt iframes crash on reload unless I have another tab with godbolt open. I didn't see anything obvious in Chrome's log.
I can't replicate the crash at all on my Linux cloud VM though. Usually the only difference there is that advertisers tend to not buy ads for clients on cloud IPs.