Kudos to Spotify's design language for us being able to determine what app it is from just a generic error screenshot
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Another round of tech layoffs and leadership pay increases should fix it
There’s a PM out there creating a ticket to fix this issue with some LLM driven nonsense.
One for [email protected]
100% a more fitting community for this post, I just didnt rememeber it at the time
We also have [email protected]!
OP has a very appropriate username for posting software gore. I guess I kind of do too.
The fact that spotify uses bright green as "fatal-error" color makes me a bit mad.
Unlocalized strings are not errors.
I have several Jira tickets that would like a word with you.
Of course they are an error, what are you talking about.
Error: A mistake; an accidental wrong action or a false statement not made deliberately
Pellaeon started as Rukh brushed silently past him; he hadn't realized the Noghri had followed them down. Thrawn waited until Rukh was standing at his side, then turned back to Colclazure. "Do you know the difference between an error and a mistake, Ensign?"
The entire bridge had gone deathly still. Colclazure swallowed again, his face starting to go pale. "No, sir."
"Anyone can make an error, Ensign. But that error doesn't become a mistake until you refuse to correct it." He raised a finger-
And, almost lazily, pointed.
Pellaeon never even saw Rukh move. Pieterson certainly never had time to scream.
- Hier to the Empire, by Timothy Zahn
It's a common dictionary, which is probably not very good in this context. I think it would be more appropriate to refer to ISTQB, as it is likely the most relevant source when it comes to software testing and failures:
Human beings make errors (mistakes), which produce defects (faults, bugs), which in turn may result in failures. Humans make errors for various reasons, such as time pressure, complexity of work products, processes, infrastructure or interactions, or simply because they are tired or lack adequate training
Or to put it simple:
We're seeing a failure here.
I guess it depends on the definition, but I'd say they absolutely are errors; if some function produces a result that is both unexpected for the user and outside the design criteria it should be considered an error.
Yes, they are errors
Examples of such things being labelled as an error: