It is not, with broccoli and cauliflower you literally eat the buds, or how they are called in English, and they can of course flower.
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ThePancakeExperiment@feddit.orgto Programming@programming.dev•Thoughts on codecademy site?3·3 months agoI don’t know codecademy, but there is also:
cs50x
Don’t know what people think of it, but it helped me a lot in understanding the basics of programming and I really liked the exercises. But I am just a hobby programmer working on smaller stuff.
ThePancakeExperiment@feddit.orgto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What are the modern design trends you hate most?31·4 months agoTouch controls everywhere, I’ve got an induction cook top which is all touch, (temperature is a bar you can drag) guess what happens when you’ve got some spillage while cooking. Yeah, if you are lucky nothing happens, but I had it several times shutting itself down, or adjusting the temperature, which is fucking stupid and dangerous. You want to get rid of the water with a towel? Something will trigger. Really great.
Letting the computer decide what is best for you. There was/is this feature?! in windows 10, or 11 where it sets the color of your font on the desktop based on your wallpaper, and I did not find a way to change it. So what happens when you’ve got a wallpaper that is bright on top and darker on the bottom, like maybe a landscape image? Guess you are just not reading any of the text on the top half…
ThePancakeExperiment@feddit.orgto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•How many languages can you say Please and Thank You in?2·6 months agoI know some, I guess, hope I do not butcher them:
German(native): Bitte/ Danke (sehr) or Vielen Dank,
English: please/ thank you (very much),
Japanese: どうぞ or おねがいします or ください/ (どうも)ありがとう(ございます) (Which is douzo (when you offer someone something, I think, onegaishimasu/kudasai (if you want something or someone to do something, which is following the request.)/ (domo)arigatou(gozaimasu),
Norwegian: vær så snill / (tusen) takk,
(Which is like “Sei so gut/lieb”/ “Tausend Dank” in German.),Romanian: vă rog or te rog (formal/informal)/ mulțumesc ((foarte) mult) or mersi (mult) (ă is a short a, I guess and ț is like the ts from “its”, or a German z)
French: s’il vous plait (that one I had to look up on how to write)/ merci
Polish: proszę (bardzo)/ dzięki or dziękuję (bardzo) (Like proshe/ djenki/djenkuje)(ę is nasalized)
Portuguese: faz favor or por favor/ obrigado or obrigada (male/female) (o is spoken like an u) (I do not know much Portuguese (like French and Polish), in my book (European Portuguese faz favor and por favor are used, but I do not know the differences.)
ThePancakeExperiment@feddit.orgto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•In how many languages can you count to 10?1·6 months agoI get this question quite often, but to be frank, I just like the sound of it.
ThePancakeExperiment@feddit.orgto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•In how many languages can you count to 10?1·6 months agoOh, just like in Japanese, did not know that, they have the ten thousands quirk too. Would love to learn more Chinese and other languages, but I lack free time.
ThePancakeExperiment@feddit.orgto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•In how many languages can you count to 10?3·6 months agoI can count to ten in more language than I am able to speak (I just love learning stuff):
Can count above ten:
German (native), English, Norwegian, Romanian, Russian, JapaneseCan count only up to ten:
French, Polish, MandarinI am learning Romanian at the moment, those are 0-10: zero,
unu/ una,
doi/ două,
trei,
patru,
cinci,
șase,
șapte,
opt,
nouă,
zece
Lidl does have some zero caffeine and zero sugar cola. They introduced it this year I think.