I think they don't understand what milquetoast actually means, as the post defintiely isn't - django quite clearly asserted themselves and their rules.
What the parent comment was probably trying to say was something like "a completely reasonable, uncontroversial post that I'm glad to see them make", but chose milquetoast (a word that no normal human ever uses - and certainly not in casual conversation) due to an affectation of one kind or another.
On the contrary, they could have stated their points much more bluntly and strongly than they did in the post. I had the same impression upon reading it.
Milquetoast perfectly describes it, I am happy to see less common words used around here (specially when the convey the intended meaning this precisely), and I find claiming "affectation" of the person who used it unnecessarily rude.
I think they don't understand what milquetoast actually means, as the post defintiely isn't - django quite clearly asserted themselves and their rules.
What the parent comment was probably trying to say was something like "a completely reasonable, uncontroversial post that I'm glad to see them make", but chose milquetoast (a word that no normal human ever uses - and certainly not in casual conversation) due to an affectation of one kind or another.
On the contrary, they could have stated their points much more bluntly and strongly than they did in the post. I had the same impression upon reading it.
Milquetoast perfectly describes it, I am happy to see less common words used around here (specially when the convey the intended meaning this precisely), and I find claiming "affectation" of the person who used it unnecessarily rude.
Here's a good use of LLMs - asking whether this article is milquetoast. It's not.
https://chatgpt.com/share/69b9be3b-a298-8009-bb21-c3afef1e5e...
Moreover, that word doesn't even fit within the parent comment's context.
> Incredibly milquetoast. I would not like to work with anyone who goes against these points. reply
They use milquetoast as a positive thing, and the opposite of how you use it.
You're unfortunately mistaken about everything here.
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Is it?