TGTGInsighttelegram intelligenceLIVE / telegram public index
← GitHub Trends

TGINSIGHT SIMILAR POSTS

Find similar content

Source channel @githubtrending · Post #15049 · Aug 12

#java#distributed_systems#durable_execution#grpc#java#javascript#microservice_orchestration#orchestration_engine#orchestrator#reactjs#spring_boot#workflow_automation#workflow_engine#workflow_management#workflows Conductor is an open-source tool that helps you manage and automate complex workflows involving many microservices and systems. It makes your workflows flexible, reliable, and scalable by handling retries, errors, and monitoring automatically. You can define workflows as code in JSON, use various task types, and manage workflows dynamically without tightly coupling services. It offers an easy-to-use web interface and supports multiple databases like Redis and MySQL. This helps you build, run, and monitor workflows efficiently, saving time and reducing errors in managing distributed applications. It also has SDKs for Java, Python, JavaScript, Go, and C# to integrate easily with your projects. https://github.com/conductor-oss/conductor

Results

1 similar post found

Search: #intransitiveverbs

当前筛选 #intransitiveverbs清除筛选
Journey to Fluency

@fluencyinenglish · Post #7908 · 02/17/2026, 07:57 PM

Difference Between “drop out” and “be dropped out” Many people make this mistake: ❌ I was dropped out This sentence is grammatically incorrect. The correct structure is: ✅ I dropped out. Meaning: I voluntarily left or withdrew from school/university. Why “was dropped out” is wrong “Drop out” is an intransitive verb. It does not take an object, so it cannot be used in the passive voice. ❌ You cannot say: I was dropped out of university. Because dropping out is something you do yourself. Correct Usage If it was your decision: I dropped out of university. If it wasn’t your decision: Use other verbs to express that: I was expelled from university. I was forced to leave university. @fluencyinenglish #EnglishGrammar#GrammarTips#DropOut#PassiveVoice#IntransitiveVerbs#IELTSGrammar#CommonMistakes#LearnEnglish#TEFL