id,user,user_label,created_at,full_text,retweeted_status,retweeted_status_label,quoted_status,quoted_status_label,place,place_label,source,source_label,truncated,display_text_range,in_reply_to_status_id,in_reply_to_user_id,in_reply_to_screen_name,geo,coordinates,contributors,is_quote_status,retweet_count,favorite_count,favorited,retweeted,possibly_sensitive,lang,scopes 1394274447612317697,937000244650192897,Sarah Dayan,2021-05-17T12:51:47+00:00,"Old clichés die hard, so time for a refresher. Anyone is welcome to dislike utility classes, but comparing them to inline styles is a fallacy. Let's go deeper to understand why. https://frontstuff.io/no-utility-classes-arent-the-same-as-inline-styles",,,,,,,1f89d6a41b1505a3071169f8d0d028ba9ad6f952,Twitter Web App,0,"[0, 203]",,,,,,,0,268,1183,0,0,0,en, 1467496371821465602,937000244650192897,Sarah Dayan,2021-12-05T14:09:34+00:00,"@swyx My wife is studying psychology and currently works on confidence. Some interesting points she shared (simplified and filtered by my own perception, not her exact words): Acting under or overconfident are both signs of a lack of confidence. They’re both defense mechanisms.",,,,,,,95f3aaaddaa45937ac94765e0ddb68ba2be92d20,Twitter for iPhone,0,"[6, 279]",1467249786604584961,33521530,swyx,,,,0,0,23,0,0,,en,