archived
stringclasses
2 values
author
stringlengths
3
20
author_fullname
stringlengths
4
12
body
stringlengths
0
22.5k
comment_type
stringclasses
1 value
controversiality
stringclasses
2 values
created_utc
stringlengths
10
10
edited
stringlengths
4
12
gilded
stringclasses
7 values
id
stringlengths
1
7
link_id
stringlengths
7
10
locked
stringclasses
2 values
name
stringlengths
4
10
parent_id
stringlengths
5
10
permalink
stringlengths
41
91
retrieved_on
stringlengths
10
10
score
stringlengths
1
4
subreddit_id
stringclasses
1 value
subreddit_name_prefixed
stringclasses
1 value
subreddit_type
stringclasses
1 value
total_awards_received
stringclasses
19 values
False
Ravin66
t2_drgdm
Why wait? It's better to get in before it passes.
null
0
1544081613
False
0
eb77id1
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb76vur
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb77id1/
1547084597
96
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Code4Reddit
t2_fd0jj
JAWS is not just nightmare fuel in the movie theaters!!
null
0
1545242670
False
0
ec4k4in
t3_a7k0an
null
null
t1_ec3stsf
/r/programming/comments/a7k0an/did_google_cripple_edges_youtube_performance/ec4k4in/
1547813359
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Katholikos
t2_dqowe
I’m very curious how the companies currently using Jira will react
null
0
1544081662
False
0
eb77jgv
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb74zkv
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb77jgv/
1547084610
53
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
JoseJimeniz
t2_7bcl1
> So imagine instead a hypothetical "run this app in private mode" option that you could get when right-clicking any program. And that's certainly an interesting feature - and it will be neat when that feature is added to Windows. But it is not this feature.
null
0
1545242688
False
0
ec4k5fs
t3_a7hbku
null
null
t1_ec4ah7h
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec4k5fs/
1547813370
6
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Synatix
t2_ihx2j
Yeah but the adventage of that feature is that u dont need the dependencies localy... And why the heck should i run or debug it ? We have automated tests for that
null
0
1544081667
False
0
eb77jl0
t3_a34gu4
null
null
t1_eb5y6et
/r/programming/comments/a34gu4/vs_code_first_look_at_a_rich_code_navigation/eb77jl0/
1547084612
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
octos4murai
t2_98fmi6n
My god, he does look remarkably Yoda-ish in that photo, doesn't he? *(I say this with a lot of respect and admiration for the man.)*
null
0
1545242732
False
0
ec4k7j0
t3_a7m6jc
null
null
t3_a7m6jc
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec4k7j0/
1547813426
34
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
lobax
t2_bvses
Don't know that you make less bugs, you just get better at identifying their causes.
null
0
1544081697
False
0
eb77k88
t3_a3crqx
null
null
t1_eb59bgz
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb77k88/
1547084620
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
rouille
t2_bfc17
Well except it gives chrome an inherent advantage because Google services devs would never deploy a feature hitting a chrome bug with a slow fallback code in the first place. I understand why, it's not malice from the Google devs, but the end result is the same.
null
0
1545242746
False
0
ec4k87d
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec4i60x
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4k87d/
1547813436
9
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Decker108
t2_6cpnt
I heard that the new licensing fee is a pound of flesh per CPU core...
null
0
1544082027
False
0
eb77roh
t3_a3dobm
null
null
t1_eb6jl70
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb77roh/
1547084711
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
WhereAreWeNowAnon
t2_rxns10g
I legit had to do this for a site I'm developing. Not sleep, but some implementation using flex boxes and having to create alternate logic for Edge so that things would display correctly. Works in all browsers including IE 11. Edge? Nope. If Edge, do these things, otherwise all good.
null
0
1545242750
False
0
ec4k8e1
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec3suk9
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4k8e1/
1547813438
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
greppable777
t2_15e75v
So this is a library that I will never use. I don’t expect everything to work, but if I report a soundness bug, like the library not being thread safe, and take the time to fix it by sending a PR, I expect the PR to be reviewed within days. This issue sounds like an exploitable memory vulnerability that they left their Users exposed to for no real reason. FU FB.
null
0
1544082041
False
0
eb77rzt
t3_a3crqx
null
null
t1_eb5hot2
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb77rzt/
1547084715
9
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
lumpy_snake
t2_lfxr7
I sure hope those people have IP-based authorization for their databases. But most likely they don't.
null
0
1545242752
False
0
ec4k8hq
t3_a7o4k1
null
null
t1_ec4e5yf
/r/programming/comments/a7o4k1/publicly_accessible_env_files_or_dont_put_your/ec4k8hq/
1547813440
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Fisher9001
t2_a7ja8
Degree in law should be secondary to actual degree in the field you are creating laws for.
null
0
1544082127
False
1
eb77tyd
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb6zzsq
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb77tyd/
1547084739
940
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
CocteauQuintuplet
t2_cqvigda
You've been summoned to r/iamverybadass, stop ignoring your beckon
null
0
1545242789
False
0
ec4ka6g
t3_a7nahb
null
null
t1_ec4k4dg
/r/programming/comments/a7nahb/the_yoda_of_silicon_valley/ec4ka6g/
1547813460
-6
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
piginpoop
t2_dzce9
java is "native" hmm
null
0
1544082195
False
0
eb77vdf
t3_a3crqx
null
null
t3_a3crqx
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb77vdf/
1547084756
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
stovenn
t2_ntpwb
Any demo?
null
0
1545242824
False
0
ec4kbvk
t3_a7o3p0
null
null
t3_a7o3p0
/r/programming/comments/a7o3p0/webassembly_is_fast_a_realworld_benchmark_of/ec4kbvk/
1547813481
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Decker108
t2_6cpnt
The datastore-that-must-not-be-named.
null
0
1544082221
False
0
eb77vye
t3_a3dobm
null
null
t1_eb76fmo
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb77vye/
1547084764
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
variance in the benchmarks is _staggering_ which leads me question the methodology of the collection process.
null
0
1545242831
False
0
ec4kc6g
t3_a7o3p0
null
null
t3_a7o3p0
/r/programming/comments/a7o3p0/webassembly_is_fast_a_realworld_benchmark_of/ec4kc6g/
1547813485
44
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
greppable777
t2_15e75v
I had to fix a couple of portability issues related to endianness in the last couple of years, and in Rust this was trivial to fix because introducing these kinds of bugs requires ‘unsafe’ to transmute, type pun, etc
null
0
1544082230
False
0
eb77w60
t3_a3juw0
null
null
t3_a3juw0
/r/programming/comments/a3juw0/til_nuxi_is_another_way_to_describe_endianess/eb77w60/
1547084767
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
anothdae
t2_15wz2i
Eh... onedrive is the best cloud storage provider, hands down. Not only is it easy, the web interface is outstanding. Full Office suites on the web, no install required. Anywhere you are, you can access and edit your files. That is *miles* ahead of g-drive and dropbox. Not to mention the one-note integration, and the fact that it's built into every windows 10 computer. Maybe the nag screens are annoying, but as a product it's one of MS's better new ones.
null
1
1545242841
False
0
ec4kcpb
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec4cbtg
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4kcpb/
1547813491
-2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Kinglink
t2_4fxzq
Just going to say, as a libertarian the post title here is great. If a company doesn't want the backdoors, the company should have the say not the programmers. And the fact that any government is trying to force backdoors into software should be considered dangerous. Even with the "we'll only use it certain circumstances" excuse... no one believes that ever. But on the other hand that's not the REAL story, and the real story is more important. But it all comes down to this. Fuck governments who believe they can control the software that tech companies write. I do hope Apple pulls out of Australia as does other tech giants because nothing about this law is ok.
null
0
1544082396
False
0
eb77zte
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t3_a3kk7u
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb77zte/
1547084812
25
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Sarcastinator
t2_6hs1t
Why does that matter? If you want to make 3D then implementing a quadtree is a complete waste of time. You're not going to save any time by making a quadtree first.
null
0
1545242872
False
0
ec4ke55
t3_a7f2o1
null
null
t1_ec4jp6r
/r/programming/comments/a7f2o1/how_to_start_learning_computer_graphics/ec4ke55/
1547813509
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
FUZxxl
t2_bnjww
The PDP-11 is not a “mixed endian” machine. It's a fairly straightforward little endian machine. This whole PDP-11 endian stuff was merely a programming convention some variants of UNIX employed to implement 32 bit integers.
null
0
1544082591
False
0
eb784e1
t3_a3juw0
null
null
t3_a3juw0
/r/programming/comments/a3juw0/til_nuxi_is_another_way_to_describe_endianess/eb784e1/
1547084869
29
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
litjens
t2_idy7p
One day I'd like to hear the story but not now. After the first few paragraphs I realized I was reading a book from someone with too much time on his hands. Brevity is an unappreciated skill.
null
0
1545242874
False
0
ec4ke8n
t3_a7lgy8
null
null
t3_a7lgy8
/r/programming/comments/a7lgy8/how_to_become_a_rust_superdeveloper_hashnode/ec4ke8n/
1547813510
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
mikey_g
t2_463fz
Thanks, I sort of agree about their contrived example being quite long, but I definitely prefer it to their contrived problematic switch statement they replaced. I think your algorithm solution is still what most people will write, because it's much more natural to think about. Having said all that however, I can absolutely see the value in having a pattern style return switch block. Your point about null vs whitespace is an excellent one, I wonder whether that's an option with pattern matching switch statements. maybe they have visions of composite types or something later on down the track, and that return switch block can be extended slightly: return (p.FirstName, p.MiddleName, p.LastName) switch { case (string f, null | string.Empty, string l) => $"{f} {l}", case (string f, string m, null | string.Empty) => $"{f} {m}", // etc };
null
0
1544082641
False
0
eb785ll
t3_a3ghju
null
null
t1_eb6nz0g
/r/programming/comments/a3ghju/whats_new_in_c_80/eb785ll/
1547084884
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
WhereAreWeNowAnon
t2_rxns10g
I'm already blockchain.
null
0
1545242876
False
0
ec4keck
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec4emfh
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4keck/
1547813511
9
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
samkellett
t2_4dhul
that's the same as "cache".
null
0
1544082658
False
0
eb7860u
t3_a3e1ea
null
null
t1_eb6ojsw
/r/programming/comments/a3e1ea/how_can_dereferencing_the_first_character_of_a/eb7860u/
1547084888
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
anothdae
t2_15wz2i
> Any military which has Trump as Commander & Chief is quite worrisome as it is. "Orange man bad" I also like how the implication is that the day a new president is elected, your whole view of the military changes. Lol.
null
1
1545242918
False
0
ec4kgck
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec3xag5
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4kgck/
1547813536
-1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
kutuzof
t2_39as7
Does anyone actually use triggers? I feel they tend to cause more problems then they solve and they make debugging or understanding old code way more difficult.
null
0
1544082692
False
0
eb786ty
t3_a3dobm
null
null
t3_a3dobm
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb786ty/
1547084899
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
natcodes
t2_2pfazht3
> Back in the Windows Phone days a few years ago, Microsoft spent a huge amount of time building a YouTube app since Google refused to do it themselves Google isn't required to spend the time and money making an app for a platform that had ~3-4% of the marketshare at the time the app stuff went down. MS deciding to make their own app put them at the whim of the platform operator, like every other third-party app for every service. > Very shortly after Microsoft released it, Google severed the API's. The 2nd app was still in violation of ToS, what exact violation MS had only MS and Google know of. So in response, Google pulled the API *tokens*, not the APIs themselves. Pulling API tokens in response to a ToS breach is standard practice for Google, and they generally don't make exceptions to that practice no matter what tokens they're axing.
null
1
1545242928
False
0
ec4kgqt
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec3yae9
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4kgqt/
1547813542
5
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
dedido
t2_2di7uqme
Winux
null
0
1544082968
False
0
eb78czx
t3_a32foa
null
null
t1_eb3wxmk
/r/programming/comments/a32foa/announcing_open_source_of_wpf_windows_forms_and/eb78czx/
1547085005
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
dalittle
t2_4ahob
I think it is especially hilarious if you consider how anti-competitive microsoft has been in the past. Embrace and destroy was their mantra in the 80s and 90s. Looks at windows 10 and their big brother crap there among other things and I kind of dismiss any complaining they do.
null
0
1545242932
False
0
ec4kgxw
t3_a7k0an
null
null
t1_ec3xsce
/r/programming/comments/a7k0an/did_google_cripple_edges_youtube_performance/ec4kgxw/
1547813543
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
techtox
t2_rcjsr
But can the government be fired for trying to implement backdoors?
null
0
1544083136
False
0
eb78gpk
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t3_a3kk7u
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb78gpk/
1547085051
56
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
FlyingCheeseburger
t2_cev9y
Well, we are all speculating here - but from what was written in the article, there seems to be no valid reason for adding the div in the first place.
null
0
1545242971
False
0
ec4kitg
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec4g5qa
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4kitg/
1547813566
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
rovarma
t2_1qgxb439
Yeah this was an enormously frustrating article to read. While reading it I wanted to shout '"Look at android.support.v4.util.Pools$SimplePool.release(Pools.java:116)! All the information you need to diagnose & fix this issue is right there!". He got there in the end, but wow, what a roundabout way of debugging a problem. I'll chalk this one up to being very inexperienced in programming/debugging.
null
0
1544083152
False
0
eb78h27
t3_a3crqx
null
null
t1_eb55tuo
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb78h27/
1547085054
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
uhhhclem
t2_n3j0
Literate programming is *twee*?
null
0
1545243043
False
0
ec4km4b
t3_a7m6jc
null
null
t3_a7m6jc
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec4km4b/
1547813607
17
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Skorohodov
t2_c5jcg
So the Postgres documentation is excellent and is all you need to learn that basics. Almost everything you would ever want to know is covered in there somewhere including helpful advice and warnings, but it's also thousands of pages long. There's a very active community making a lot of blog & SO posts that address different use cases and niches. A good strategy is to read what a few people have done in your situtation, cross check their facts with the manual and then start experimenting. Also make sure you don't blindly follow outdated advice, Postgres is under very active development and things change and are improved more quickly than you migh expect. I think databases are one of those things that advanced topics really need to be learned hands on, contriving test cases that match real world usage is non-trivial and can be expensive at true scale. Get a good grasp of the basics, be aware of where you can get into true trouble, and start working.
null
0
1544083250
False
0
eb78j7d
t3_a3dobm
null
null
t1_eb74bvv
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb78j7d/
1547085081
5
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
[deleted]
null
0
1545243044
False
0
ec4km69
t3_a7o3p0
null
null
t1_ec4gghr
/r/programming/comments/a7o3p0/webassembly_is_fast_a_realworld_benchmark_of/ec4km69/
1547813608
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
audioen
t2_gz6hs
The thing with Google is, they silently do their analytics/whatever and never get in your face about it, so users have no reason to care. With Firefox, users get actively reminded that Mozilla is trying to use them somehow, like recently they sent out advertisement for some concert to their Sync users, and you have to opt out of every kind of telemetry and studies to avoid unwanted ads, and remove every single thing they put into the new tab page, disable pocket extension via about:config, and so on. The list of things to do to Firefox so that it continues being a dumb browser it used to be keeps getting longer. Doing it Google's way is better, because people will just ignore the invisible ways they're being used. Anyway, Firefox is no longer horrible on macOS. The latest few versions have apparently fixed a lot of its performance problems. That being said, the only really good browser on macOS is still Safari. Unfortunately, Firefox is kinda buggy in ways that webkit based browsers generally aren't, and I generally have to add workarounds just to keep Firefox working with my code. People who don't write webapps seem to think that it's good to have multiple implementations of a standard, but in practice all it results in is having to use some subset of capabilities that happen to work in all browsers, and filing bugs in the respective bug-trackers of all the browsers that are broken. Bunch of my problems with Firefox are straight out bugs that have to do with Firefox interpreting the standard wrong, or just ignoring it, nothing to do with following standards, quite the opposite. Off the top of my head: * Form controls, e.g. checkbox, radio groups, select boxes largely ignore CSS. This is due to using native toolkits to render them, and they often are very limited, e.g. no resizing support. Chrome reimplemented these at some point, which is good because there is now a fallback path that generally respects your styling while still approximating the platform's look and feel. If you ever make a touch UI in HTML to be used with a touchscreen on desktop OS like Ubuntu, you'll probably run into having to reimplement form controls with CSS due to Firefox. * SVG support has several issues. The major thing seems to be that using css classes to style objects doesn't work because there's apparently a shadow DOM boundary, e.g. <use xlink:href="#someId"/> disconnects the object #someId from the styling of the rest of the SVG. This makes it hard to build SVG out of reusable primitives, at least if you want to centrally control the line styles and fills of related objects you've defined. There's probably a workaround, at the limit I could just copy the relevant css definitions into every SVG element manually, but I'm just reluctant to do so. (There is a 14 year old bug about this!) * SVG can have own coordinate system with viewBox declaration. If event originates from SVG, it gets the coordinates such as offsetX and offsetY from the SVG coordinate system, even if the event listener was not on the SVG but e.g. on a <div> wrapping the <svg> resulting in completely wrong coordinates being delivered to the <div>. Following the logic of the average commentator on technology subreddits, it's somehow good that competition in HTML space guarantees that I can't build touch-usable UIs without having to do bunch of useless work of reimplementing things like <select>, or that it's good that I can't use viewBox declaration on SVG because it's so buggy that it totally fucks up event delivery on Firefox. I want some of what these people are smoking. The simple fact is, the less browser engines there are to support, the more of standard you can actually use, and the less workarounds have to be maintained. Browsers are a natural monopoly. Having one dominant implementation that everyone writes to, and uses, is basically the expected outcome.
null
0
1544083276
1544085944
0
eb78jqw
t3_a3htqg
null
null
t1_eb734t4
/r/programming/comments/a3htqg/while_we_blink_we_loose_the_web/eb78jqw/
1547085088
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
LimEJET
t2_4zfyw
Knuth is lovely. He had a Q&A session at my university in January to coincide with his [80th birthday celebration](http://knuth80.elfbrink.se/). His wit is great; someone asked him for a basic breakdown of bitcoin and he started by calling it the "latest and greatest in a long line of pyramid schemes". While I don't 100% agree with his super-hard stance on literal programming I definitely like and respect the idea of paradigm. Don apparently codes exclusively in CWEB now, and his descriptions are super-flowery and prosaic. The code is a joy to read, but a slog to get through if you just want the information. **Edit**: [Here's a transcript of the Q&A Session.](https://www.ltu.se/org/srt/Legend-i-datavetenskap-besokte-universitetet-1.172704?l=en)
null
0
1545243097
1545244554
0
ec4komx
t3_a7m6jc
null
null
t3_a7m6jc
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec4komx/
1547813639
101
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
jonjonbee
t2_t44gw
Not sure why this is getting so many upvotes - it's a really simple bug that anyone with a modicum of knowledge of multi-threading should immediately be able to spot. The smoking cannon is the attempted -1 index into an array, which immediately tells me something was expecting the index to be 0, but something else decremented the variable before the read could happen. That's textbook, textbook race condition. This piece from the post infuriates me though: > Ok this is where it's happening then, in android/support/v4/util/Pools.java. > Hmm, we're pretty deep into the Android support library, not sure we can deduce much from this at this point. NO YOU DO NOT JUST LOOK AT THE TOP FRAME IN THE STACK TRACE YOU LOOK AT ALL THE FRAMES In this case, if the dev had checked the second frame - you know, the one that says `react` and `DynamicFromMap` - and plugged the result into Google - "react-native dynamicfrommap" - he would've seen that the second result is a link to a GitHub issue, which almost exactly describes the exception their app was seeing, that also includes a link to a PR correcting the issue - the same PR referenced in the blog post. No guesswork or debugging necessary; I guess this is what separates seniors from juniors. Far more infuriating though, is Facebook's laissez-faire approach to merging PRs. The fix was submitting at the start of February and sat around untouched for *ten fucking months*! That is not how how you handle a bug in your library, **especially** not a bug concerning thread safety! Facebook's attitude to this is more amateur than the blog post, but at least now I know to avoid ever using `react-native`.
null
0
1544083340
1544090650
0
eb78l3t
t3_a3crqx
null
null
t3_a3crqx
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb78l3t/
1547085105
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
quietIntensity
t2_dz18l
Way back in 1998, I was working as a contract programmer and found a specific issue where if our HTML people used the Netscape HTML tools to write the pages, the MS IIS server would serve those web pages with only the HTML tags and none of the rest of the content. Change any single character in the Meta tag that said a Netscape utility was used to build the pages and they would be delivered correctly from IIS. This is in no way a new development and in no way is Microsoft innocent of these practices.
null
0
1545243102
False
0
ec4koux
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t3_a7jj68
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4koux/
1547813641
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Zhyko-
t2_y9nan
Oh. Oh fuck.
null
0
1544083373
False
1
eb78lt5
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb75a70
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb78lt5/
1547085113
38
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
countofmontecristo0
t2_2hi8alf4
Where? Which post ? Not getting notifications
null
0
1545243138
False
0
ec4kqir
t3_a7nahb
null
null
t1_ec4ka6g
/r/programming/comments/a7nahb/the_yoda_of_silicon_valley/ec4kqir/
1547813661
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
ptrwis
t2_l7kzs
I've neved used it but it looks like pgadmin has the ability to debug procedures: https://www.pgadmin.org/docs/pgadmin4/dev/debugger.html
null
0
1544083508
False
0
eb78op3
t3_a3dobm
null
null
t1_eb65bg7
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb78op3/
1547085149
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
madwill
t2_3nsau
Dude calm down... What is not an over-engineered pile of shit? Spring? .Net? Rails?
null
0
1545243164
False
0
ec4krsj
t3_a7lho8
null
null
t1_ec4f82g
/r/programming/comments/a7lho8/reasons_why_vuejs_is_getting_more_traction_every/ec4krsj/
1547813677
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
argv_minus_one
t2_4hatx
>Several threads can run within a single program and can potentially access a common data structure, which can lead to unexpected results. This right here is my biggest complaint about Java. Not performance, not memory usage, not `EnterpriseBeanFactoryFactorySupplier`, *this.* Java's thread-unsafety is a gaping hole in a language/VM that otherwise has very little undefined behavior. The *whole idea* of Java was, among other things, that you'd reliably get an exception or compile error for almost any mistake. Even malicious bytecode that tries to do something funny, like access a local variable that doesn't actually exist, just gives a `VerifyError` when you try to load it. Everything's safe, well-defined, and predictable. Beautiful. …Unless your program has more than one thread. Try to read a field that was written to at some point by a different thread? No guarantees as to what its value will be. Forget which thread is supposed to mutate a particular `ArrayList`? You may or may not get an exception while iterating over it. Set up a Swing window in your `main` method? It usually works, but sometimes it'll do something strange instead. This sucks. Java ought to have harder guarantees about thread safety, like Rust (which tracks object ownership and mutability) and JavaScript (which only allows message passing and atomic shared buffers).
null
0
1544083545
False
0
eb78phd
t3_a3crqx
null
null
t3_a3crqx
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb78phd/
1547085159
-1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
EWJacobs
t2_bash7
Yeah, but React did it first. Which is more important when you're talking about market adoption.
null
0
1545243200
False
0
ec4ktim
t3_a7lho8
null
null
t1_ec4jxkx
/r/programming/comments/a7lho8/reasons_why_vuejs_is_getting_more_traction_every/ec4ktim/
1547813698
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Bowgentle
t2_aix51
I've tried that, and variants of it - those are what I meant by 'run-on' attacks - to no apparent effect. Still, as with anything 'roll your own' in security...
null
0
1544083835
False
0
eb78vg5
t3_a2way5
null
null
t1_eb77f1e
/r/programming/comments/a2way5/this_is_why_you_sanitize_user_input_chat_hacked/eb78vg5/
1547085232
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
CocteauQuintuplet
t2_cqvigda
Just go look at new posts goddamnit, you've been summoned twice, don't act like you don't see it
null
0
1545243202
False
0
ec4ktm0
t3_a7nahb
null
null
t1_ec4kqir
/r/programming/comments/a7nahb/the_yoda_of_silicon_valley/ec4ktm0/
1547813699
-7
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
coladict
t2_aijf0
So they looked at the source of the library in use to find the bug? Big deal. I've done that and found bugs that weren't my own. Sure it's nice to have the sources for those to be able to do it, but if you didn't have them, you'd waste days looking at your code for a mistake that isn't there.
null
0
1544083867
False
0
eb78w4h
t3_a3crqx
null
null
t3_a3crqx
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb78w4h/
1547085241
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
BlueShellOP
t2_cxgta
That's still an advertisement in a paid OS advertising you that companies product over a competitor's. If that isn't anti-competitive behavior, I don't know what is.
null
0
1545243264
False
0
ec4kwjg
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec49fvl
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4kwjg/
1547813736
-2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
TheRandomWolf
t2_gx63w
That's a fair point, I guess it really does make a big difference to find out that it's very hard to do in Rust for example when you're trying to pick a language to learn/use.
null
0
1544083875
False
0
eb78waj
t3_a38r63
null
null
t1_eb51hq7
/r/programming/comments/a38r63/4_languages_1_app/eb78waj/
1547085243
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Carighan
t2_478sf
Also have to put those 200MB of javascript **somewhere**! There was no space for it left on Maps, so...
null
0
1545243297
False
0
ec4ky4e
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec4f5n5
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4ky4e/
1547813756
22
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Thinkblu3
t2_td8lz
All programmers. Not just Australians.
null
0
1544084100
False
0
eb790yz
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t3_a3kk7u
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb790yz/
1547085301
11
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
alexeyr
t2_37mmv
https://wasmboy.app/
null
0
1545243305
False
0
ec4kygj
t3_a7o3p0
null
null
t1_ec4kbvk
/r/programming/comments/a7o3p0/webassembly_is_fast_a_realworld_benchmark_of/ec4kygj/
1547813759
6
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Chaoslab
t2_3x3gz
Luckily math is a bad negotiator so good luck with that. And in the free market no sane security professional would buy a bucket with a hole in it.
null
0
1544084142
False
0
eb791u4
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t3_a3kk7u
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb791u4/
1547085311
59
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
rinnagz
t2_hip66
Just your typical Google fanboy
null
1
1545243419
False
0
ec4l405
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec4d5p1
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4l405/
1547813828
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
slashgrin
t2_3jn89
This is the bit that I don't get: if a targeted messaging app already employs end-to-end encryption with no sever-side storage even of encrypted messages, and entities can't be compelled to introduce systemic weaknesses... then what's left? There _is_ no way to provide any kind of meaningful assistance to law enforcement without introducing a systemic weakness. Stream additional copies of suspects' encrypted messages off to a third party for offline analysis? Merely having that mechanism exist creates a huge risk of it being exploited by a bad actor in one way or another. So, yeah, that's a systemic weakness. Add options to deliver patched binaries to suspects' phones? Same thing. So... I can only really see three possible options: 1. The bill has no effect for any serious (end-to-end encryption with no intermediate storage) secure messaging app. It's mostly useless, unless they're _actually_ targeting pedophiles and terrorists who are conducting their business on Facebook Messenger. 2. Somebody is playing games with words — e.g., the term "systemic weakness" is being willfully abused to mislead the public, and the legislators expect judges to accept extremely creative interpretation of the term, contrary to a plain reading of the law. 3. Legislators expect judges to sign off on instructions for entities to produce a particular outcome without specifying the means ("get me plaintext copies of these messages, I don't care how you achieve it") and if they turn around and say "that's impossible without introducing a systemic weakness", declare that the entity must _find_ a way or be held in contempt of court. Have I missed a plausible alternative here? And if not, which of these three is most likely?
null
0
1544084219
False
0
eb793hp
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb77evl
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb793hp/
1547085331
42
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
netgu
t2_57cfp
Why does this need to be said in 2018? It's dead obvious that you shouldn't deploy sensitive information to unprotected locations.
null
1
1545243456
False
0
ec4l5sx
t3_a7o4k1
null
null
t3_a7o4k1
/r/programming/comments/a7o4k1/publicly_accessible_env_files_or_dont_put_your/ec4l5sx/
1547813850
-2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
cryo
t2_321gp
How to get a degree in murder...
null
0
1544084223
False
0
eb793ju
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb77tyd
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb793ju/
1547085332
64
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
CarolusMagnus
t2_4o9di
Those two explanations are synonymous when we are talking about an entity that has literally hundreds if not thousands of dedicated testers that are like the best-paid ones in the world. A decision to „not care about“ working correctly on Edge, Opera or FF is then almost certainly a management-level anti-competitive decision.
null
0
1545243521
False
0
ec4l8vx
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec4cabr
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4l8vx/
1547813888
-1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
FR_STARMER
t2_9n7b9
The datastore that isn't that bad but isn't worth all the fuss
null
0
1544084286
False
0
eb794to
t3_a3dobm
null
null
t1_eb77vye
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb794to/
1547085347
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
nothis
t2_4py6o
Long-term, I think it makes a huge difference.
null
0
1545243554
False
0
ec4laeo
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec4k05w
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4laeo/
1547813907
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
N5332
t2_an6i9ho
Your comment in a roller-coaster of emotions, ent from angry to pleased in a matter of seconds
null
0
1544084351
False
0
eb7964r
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb77ck2
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7964r/
1547085363
26
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
wikwikwik
t2_2rjyrp4o
What would you rather they do? If you're an engineer you should be able to propose an actionable fix rather than a random complaint.
null
0
1545243600
False
0
ec4lciv
t3_a7nggt
null
null
t1_ec4ipp3
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec4lciv/
1547813933
50
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
cryo
t2_321gp
> the concept of a “secure back-door” is an oxymoron, No it’s not. Here is one. Create two decryption keys whenever you encrypt something. Stash one securely somewhere, encrypted with a government public key or similar. Only the private key holder can then decrypt it, and use it to decrypt the data in question. Having an extra decryption key doesn’t have to appreciably weaken the encryption. It all comes down to how secure the “master” private key is.
null
0
1544084450
False
0
eb7985w
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb77evl
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7985w/
1547085389
-23
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Manitcor
t2_319dw
Who ever is doing it is making progress, earlier it was just a still image, now we get choppy video.
null
0
1545243646
False
0
ec4lequ
t3_a7kwet
null
null
t1_ec4fdj6
/r/programming/comments/a7kwet/the_ipv6_christmas_tree/ec4lequ/
1547813960
5
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
squishles
t2_8t5uo
on a tech related topic? if you're serious I'll only laugh harder.
null
0
1544084503
False
0
eb7999f
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb78gpk
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7999f/
1547085402
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
SilasX
t2_4o64v
"Yeah, we know the entire point is to keep you from affecting the host system, buuuuuut it was just so convenient to have a little "debug" mode that lets you reach outside the box -- not like anyone will figure out how to make that go out of scope or anything.
null
0
1545243654
False
0
ec4lf33
t3_a7hbku
null
null
t1_ec37mvd
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec4lf33/
1547813965
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
pbvas
t2_668zg
Coincidently Prof. John Hughes (on the authors of the original QuickCheck) has been [honored an ACM Fellowship](https://www.acm.org/media-center/2018/december/fellows-2018) this week for this contributions to software testing and functional programming.
null
0
1544084515
False
0
eb799hf
t3_a3lw1p
null
null
t3_a3lw1p
/r/programming/comments/a3lw1p/introduction_to_property_based_testing/eb799hf/
1547085405
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
[deleted]
null
0
1545243669
False
0
ec4lfs9
t3_a7nggt
null
null
t1_ec4jmg8
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec4lfs9/
1547814002
-11
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
cryo
t2_321gp
Maybe, but that’s not something Atlassian can do anything about. The browser trusts a certain chain of certificates.
null
0
1544084551
False
0
eb79a90
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb75a70
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb79a90/
1547085415
5
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
jephthai
t2_591d
I think Google is more evil than Microsoft ever was. Microsoft used aggressive business tactics, and did all kinds of crazy stuff with buying companies, price wars, intellectual property, etc. But Microsoft has never been able to leverage privacy violations for profit the way Google has. Google, Facebook, etc., have shown that there's lots of money in selling personal information, and Microsoft can't crack that code somehow, leaving them with only shady corporate dealings. Much less evil in my book.
null
0
1545243821
False
0
ec4ln0s
t3_a7k0an
null
null
t1_ec3zhko
/r/programming/comments/a7k0an/did_google_cripple_edges_youtube_performance/ec4ln0s/
1547814092
8
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
shevegen
t2_atqp
Now, if apple goes away from your country, I would not call this a "loss" but a win. You can see how Apple refuses to pay proper taxes while it is stationed in the EU market through Ireland. The Irish government owes the rest of the EU a lot of tax-money they refused to take (because they don't want to "alienate" apple - problem is that the EU constitutes a common market, so Ireland is acting like a parasite to the other EU countries right now as long as it refuses to collect due tax). Now to the message itself - the Australian government acts like a petty mafia. It makes no sense to allow governments to sniff-invade onto the privacy of the people. Programmers who partake in this are mafia-boys and girls. Tech companies should flat-out refuse, at all times, no matter what fake-laws these criminal fake-governments use, to hand over user data. > The legislation can force tech workers to cooperate with government It is a form of slavery and criminal by this joke of a government. Do not comply with laws that make you a lapdog and criminal against other people. It's like Hitler 2.0 here where you are sniffing on others, through the software. The name "backdoor" is way too nice. It should be called "Australian government sniffing on everyone" instead. The law should be changed to put the folks who wrote this joke into prison at once, due to the damage they are causing. > "The Australian government want to recruit average IT workers as spies." Be a man and refuse becoming a government lapdog as you show these mafia-clowns the middle finger. > This could see tech companies simply refuse to work with Australian authorities Excellent. And, even better - recommend free operating systems that focus on privacy at all times, and on encryption at all times (thus Microsoft's spyware is out the window already).
null
0
1544084599
False
0
eb79b6m
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t3_a3kk7u
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb79b6m/
1547085426
-23
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
mycall
t2_22rf5
http://www.erlang.org/docs ?
null
0
1545243827
False
0
ec4lnbp
t3_a7fsq5
null
null
t1_ec2qxbv
/r/programming/comments/a7fsq5/twenty_years_of_open_source_erlang/ec4lnbp/
1547814094
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
shevegen
t2_atqp
Please - don't defend the clown government in Australia. These "limitations" are for show.
null
0
1544084634
False
0
eb79bww
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb73fo8
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb79bww/
1547085435
7
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
quantumtrouble
t2_mpe3d84
I just want to say I'm very pleasantly surprised at how civil the discussions are in this thread.
null
0
1545243896
False
0
ec4lqot
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec4guno
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4lqot/
1547814136
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
MistYeller
t2_jpb51
I think many people would consider that the provision of an account existence oracle to be a security concern more than a benefit. Especially in this case, one could argue that it is even illegal under GDPR. Since anyone who knows my email address can find out I have an EverNote account by entering my email address into that field and not being told that the account cannot be found. Edit: just to add, an email provider will always function as an account oracle as you can detect account existence just by not getting a bounce, so they are already in a different class than other service providers.
null
0
1544084670
False
0
eb79cmf
t3_a3bupj
null
null
t1_eb4umr6
/r/programming/comments/a3bupj/evernote_why_do_you_want_to_break_password/eb79cmf/
1547085444
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
spinwin
t2_5nkgz
Microsoft already has a method of dealing with that though through windows defender. If a user downloads an executable that isn't trusted, windows generally just deletes it and prevents it from being run.
null
0
1545243929
False
0
ec4ls99
t3_a7hbku
null
null
t1_ec3ty6u
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec4ls99/
1547814155
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
shevegen
t2_atqp
No they are not.
null
0
1544084702
False
0
eb79d99
t3_a3h0ah
null
null
t3_a3h0ah
/r/programming/comments/a3h0ah/types_are_the_basic_tool_of_software_design/eb79d99/
1547085452
-6
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
SoundOfDrums
t2_7immo
I have been. Doesn't make it any less stupid to follow some idiotic VPs out of spec pipe dream instead of listening to users reasonable requests.
null
0
1545244001
False
0
ec4lvpi
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec4ho7m
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4lvpi/
1547814199
-4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
shevegen
t2_atqp
Oh right! Ada! The thing we can't live without in 2018. Next year will be the year of the COBOL, together with Desktop Linux. I also heard RMS is happily improving GNU Hurd by the day so the year after we'll also have the year of the Hurd.
null
0
1544084749
False
0
eb79e7r
t3_a3h0ah
null
null
t1_eb71zwc
/r/programming/comments/a3h0ah/types_are_the_basic_tool_of_software_design/eb79e7r/
1547085463
-9
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
riwtrz
t2_avlby
> X58 That's Nehalem/Westmere isn't it? IINM Intel provided updates for the Nehalem and Westmere Xeons but [abandoned the Core products](https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2018/04/intel-drops-plans-to-develop-spectre-microcode-for-ancient-chips/). They don't even mention them in the current microcode revision tables. Edit: The Microsoft KB articles don't seem to mention updates for anything older than Sandy Bridge. I suppose it's possible that the Microsoft updates don't include the Xeon microcode even though it's available.
null
0
1545244085
1545244755
0
ec4lzs8
t3_a7hbku
null
null
t1_ec4i937
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec4lzs8/
1547814249
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Bergasms
t2_51vkp
Easy for you to say, it’s not optional. If the government requests it, I have to comply or I face 10 years and or 100k fine. Shits fucked. Our government is insane. Also they are technically incompetent
null
0
1544084766
False
0
eb79ekj
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb79b6m
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb79ekj/
1547085468
12
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
gonzofish
t2_6atui
Very cool perspective on the Don!
null
0
1545244086
False
0
ec4lztb
t3_a7m6jc
null
null
t1_ec4komx
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec4lztb/
1547814249
10
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
shevegen
t2_atqp
Ah - you mean packing-the-world-into-a-monad for Haskell?
null
0
1544084768
False
0
eb79elu
t3_a3h0ah
null
null
t1_eb72qug
/r/programming/comments/a3h0ah/types_are_the_basic_tool_of_software_design/eb79elu/
1547085468
-5
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
JnvSor
t2_4yrtl
That's fine unless you're piping the underlying video stream and screen coordinates directly to a GPU for hardware rendering. Then it becomes more difficult to calculate if/how much of the screen you can render directly. Especially when you consider that no, color is *not* the only thing you have to take into account. Box shadows, filters, contents, borders, outlines... Not to mention various other background options like argb images. If you just get the color per pixel then you lose the ability to pipe it directly to your hardware, and you have to do it every frame to handle animation edge cases too... Then you're better off rendering in software. tldr: If you don't know every edge case for dom element rendering you can't guarantee that transparent div actually is transparent
null
0
1545244345
False
0
ec4mbyq
t3_a7k0an
null
null
t1_ec3p6be
/r/programming/comments/a7k0an/did_google_cripple_edges_youtube_performance/ec4mbyq/
1547814400
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
vladmihalceacom
t2_1p0cfkq7
[Debezium](https://debezium.io/) is an open-source project, developed by Red Hat, whose main goal is to extract change events from database logs (e.g. Oracle, SQL Server, PostgreSQL, MySQL and even MongoDB) so that: - you can push them to Kafka and consume the events in other systems (e.g. analytics, caches) - you can extract the events using the embedded mode, and update application-level caches like it's the case in this article
null
0
1544084824
False
0
eb79fqt
t3_a3m37t
null
null
t3_a3m37t
/r/programming/comments/a3m37t/automating_cache_invalidation_with_cdc_change/eb79fqt/
1547085482
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
[deleted]
null
0
1545244402
False
0
ec4mel5
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec3xrvh
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4mel5/
1547814432
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Ameisen
t2_5qad2
Assembly doesn't have types. It has registers, addresses, operations, and operand sizes.
null
0
1544084836
False
0
eb79g04
t3_a1lbh8
null
null
t1_eas3v7z
/r/programming/comments/a1lbh8/announcing_typescript_32/eb79g04/
1547085485
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
funbike
t2_7xr6o
I came here to say exactly this. It's much lighter and less complex than this new feature.
null
0
1545244431
False
0
ec4mfwa
t3_a7hbku
null
null
t1_ec4da99
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec4mfwa/
1547814448
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
NeeSaver
t2_b9dgngn
C yes, C++ no.
null
0
1544084873
False
0
eb79gso
t3_a3djbw
null
null
t1_eb5us3c
/r/programming/comments/a3djbw/learn_c_with_the_help_of_libreoffice_developers/eb79gso/
1547085495
-3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
SgtDirtyMike
t2_beqxn
It has to do with the ShadowDOM amongst other things. Google uses trickery within the Chromium engine, as well as proprietary code to make their browser work faster in most of their sites. It's shitty, but it works to get people to switch.
null
0
1545244432
False
0
ec4mfy9
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec3ymx2
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4mfy9/
1547814449
5
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
lolzfeminism
t2_blppk
Jira is Australian? It's easily one of the best modern dev tools I've used.
null
0
1544084890
False
0
eb79h4s
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb71cnh
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb79h4s/
1547085499
22
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
syberman
t2_12e56u
Hmm.. only one comment remembered Netscape. Perhaps too old to remember? Microsoft was quite ruthless in destroying a commercial Netscape. Compared to that what google did may be less cruel. Microsoft must not be in browser business at all -- so many legacy problems with IE.
null
0
1545244545
False
0
ec4ml95
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec4dr3p
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec4ml95/
1547814514
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
mywan
t2_6putn
Exactly. This is a game of semantics not unlike what US authorities played with their secret laws that secretly defined the 4th amendment in a way that excluded them in a publicly unreviewable manner.
null
0
1544084968
False
0
eb79ipj
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb74oga
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb79ipj/
1547085518
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
nickguletskii200
t2_5e6yi
If you've removed OneDrive with its leftovers, try reinstalling it before updating.
null
0
1545244547
False
0
ec4mldm
t3_a7hbku
null
null
t1_ec3g9g4
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec4mldm/
1547814515
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Bergasms
t2_51vkp
Sadly, this applies to a lot of my countries politics.
null
0
1544084971
False
0
eb79irs
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb6zzsq
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb79irs/
1547085519
24
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
aquasucks
t2_3od2e
I ended up doing an in-place upgrade get it to upgrade without losing any files or installed applications. Be 100% sure that it says "keep files and apps" ​ [https://www.tenforums.com/tutorials/16397-repair-install-windows-10-place-upgrade.html](https://www.tenforums.com/tutorials/16397-repair-install-windows-10-place-upgrade.html)
null
0
1545244554
False
0
ec4mlqj
t3_a7hbku
null
null
t1_ec3juu7
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec4mlqj/
1547814520
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null