Even if you need to really shoehorn a component of the system in, just make a note about it and keep building. When you're done, you can go back and focus on replacing that one piece.
My view is that you learn a lot through the process of building this way.
Perfecting Parliament, by Roger Congleton. It's a history of the global move towards parliamentary systems. Obviously not primarily an economics book, but he does touch on some econ themes- here Congleton quoted Adam Smith on American colonial wages
make env = create environment and pip install editable mode (I typically list dev and test dependencies as optional-dependencies in pyproject.toml)
make test = test, coverage, ...
make docs = sphinx-build ...
make release = build, twine, ...
I am eyeing up Hyundai Ioniq 5/6. Any comments. Irony is keeping the dumb old Toyota is cheaper even with the crazy tax breaks in Australia! I could hand over $10k to carbon offset company instead and still be ahead with the ol banger. And have the convenience of what they call service stations :-)
Current Chevy Volt driver, have now written off GM from my list. Was considering an Ioniq 5 for my next car until I heard about the issues where a minor scrape on the bottom could require a $60K (Canadian dollars) battery replacement: https://youtu.be/EEXieo06ta8
Right now I’m just driving an old Toyota and don’t plan on buying another car. I expect all of this to explode at some point and resolve itself, or I’ll just keep rebuilding my old Toyota until I die.