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False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1544124077
|
False
|
0
|
eb8f0t1
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7hf1f
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8f0t1/
|
1547270469
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
xcdesz
|
t2_79zii
|
You are not alone. You might prefer Guice, if you haven't tried it already. It's not Xml, but you can generally wire everything up in one place (in code) if you prefer that over hidden and obfuscated bindings.
| null |
0
|
1545276690
|
False
|
0
|
ec5p5te
|
t3_a7nggt
| null | null |
t1_ec5j79y
|
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec5p5te/
|
1547832540
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
dumindunuwan
|
t2_nmylw
|
Hi Guys,
[This](https://medium.com/learning-rust/rust-error-handling-72a8e036dd3) is the fifth post I wrote about [Learning Rust on Medium](https://medium.com/learning-rust). Now you can read the same content via learning-rust.github.io as well. However in this post, I tried to summarize about,
- Smart Compiler
- Why Compiler?
- Explain Error Codes
- Panicking
- panic!()
- unimplemented!()
- unreachable!()
- assert!(), assert_eq!(), assert_ne!()
- debug_assert!(), debug_assert_eq!(), debug_assert_ne!()
- Option and Result
- Why Option and Result?
- Basic usages of Option
- Basic usages of Result
- is_some(), is_none(), is_ok(), is_err()
- ok(), err() for Result types
- Unwrap and Expect
- unwrap()
- expect()
- unwrap_err() and expect_err() for Result types
- unwrap_or(), unwrap_or_default() and unwrap_or_else()
- Error and None Propagation
- ? Operator
- try!()
- Error propagation from main()
- Combinators
- What is a combinator?
- or() and and()
- or_else()
- and_then()
- filter()
- map() and map_err()
- map_or() and map_or_else()
- ok_or() and ok_or_else()
- as_ref() and as_mut()
- Custom Error Types
- Error trait
- From trait
> 🐣 I am a Sri Lankan🇱🇰 Web Developer who works in Vietnam🇻🇳. I am not a native English speaker and I am just practicing Rust in my very little leisure time, while learning more about Golang, Devops and so much in the workplace.
So, if you found any mistake or something I need to be changed, even a spelling or a grammar mistake, please let me know.
🚀 [Hire me!](https://github.com/dumindu/hire-me/blob/master/resume_dumindu_madunuwan.pdf) 🥤 [Buy me a coffee!](https://www.buymeacoffee.com/dumindu) ⭐ [Contribute!](http://learning-rust.github.io)
| null |
0
|
1544124087
|
1544124753
|
0
|
eb8f1d0
|
t3_a3r8he
| null | null |
t3_a3r8he
|
/r/programming/comments/a3r8he/rust_error_handling_learning_rust_v/eb8f1d0/
|
1547270477
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
grauenwolf
|
t2_570j
|
There is a huge difference between setting up a toy instance for personal use and a production environment.
Thinking otherwise is why we see so many security breaches.
| null |
0
|
1545276749
|
False
|
0
|
ec5p873
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5ow6q
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5p873/
|
1547832568
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
plasticparakeet
|
t2_hhltf8g
|
I don't know, the range adaptor syntax is just weird, IMO. Functional idioms like `r.filter(...).map(...).each(...)` are more clear than `for (auto &&e : r | view::filter(...) | view::transform(...)) { ... }`. Certainly there is a reason why the committee came up with that, but it's very likely to become (another) source of misuse and confusion in the language.
| null |
0
|
1544124168
|
False
|
0
|
eb8f5vt
|
t3_a3lvtr
| null | null |
t1_eb8b9oj
|
/r/programming/comments/a3lvtr/c20_standard_ranges_eric_niebler/eb8f5vt/
|
1547270532
|
20
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
bloody-albatross
|
t2_cdjk3
|
...per hour... That's one request every 3.6 seconds. That implies that a page load took like 3.6 seconds when he used MySQL!?
| null |
0
|
1545276757
|
False
|
0
|
ec5p8ir
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5dy1c
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5p8ir/
|
1547832573
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
bobbybottombracket
|
t2_5lckw
|
Does it become a problem with a language can do the same thing many ways?
| null |
0
|
1544124211
|
False
|
0
|
eb8f87i
|
t3_a3ghju
| null | null |
t3_a3ghju
|
/r/programming/comments/a3ghju/whats_new_in_c_80/eb8f87i/
|
1547270561
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
grauenwolf
|
t2_570j
|
According to their competitors that I interviewed, the other major reason is really good documentation.
| null |
0
|
1545276797
|
False
|
0
|
ec5pa5c
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5lwsz
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5pa5c/
|
1547832620
|
7
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
saltybandana
|
t2_2hallns5
|
it's also not useful, by definition adding stuff makes anything bigger.
| null |
0
|
1544124265
|
False
|
0
|
eb8fb3n
|
t3_a3lvtr
| null | null |
t1_eb8d0gv
|
/r/programming/comments/a3lvtr/c20_standard_ranges_eric_niebler/eb8fb3n/
|
1547270597
|
12
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Booty_Bumping
|
t2_93n4r
|
Microsoft's bullies are still there. They're just pretending to "<3" linux and open source.
| null |
0
|
1545276944
|
False
|
0
|
ec5pg7n
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec3pr0j
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec5pg7n/
|
1547832694
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
coffeewithalex
|
t2_2ie1hb9f
|
* what if you don't command the mssql end and your infrastructure has nothing to do with SSIS as a product? Should we buy it together with windows and a server just for this task? What if it has nothing to connect to because data is generated by a Python script that crunches big data from Spark and streams results to standard output? What if both the sender and the receiver are on Linux? What if the entire thing, from setting up the machine, to setting up the data flow, to triggering and running them is completely scripted and automated with Ansible it any other infrastructure as code solutions, and there is simply no place and no person to launch a GUI and see this up? There are many cases where it just wouldn't fit.
* Not editing the xml manually. But if there is version control, and my colleague works on the same project on a different branch, and we manage to get a merge conflict, not in manageable code, but in loads of XML that's not meant to be read by humans. Automatic merging fails. What do you do?
* Moving a single table is slow, very slow, on anything but BCP. And BCP is cumbersome to use, and eats up a few hundreds rows at the end.
SSIS is a prohibitively expensive solution, as license, infrastructure, maintenance and development, compared to writing just 1 line, 1 command, that launches 2 free 300kB programs, and moves data between them, fast, with no hick-ups, on a Linux, Mac, BSD and even windows if you convert it to PowerShell. That's what I need when I have Bob come into my office and asking to play with a data set from my infrastructure, on his department's SQL server. I want to do it in 10 minutes and forget about it. Regardless of what OS I'm running and what software is set up in my computer..
| null |
0
|
1544124295
|
False
|
0
|
eb8fcp2
|
t3_a3dobm
| null | null |
t1_eb8bzu3
|
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb8fcp2/
|
1547270616
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
SanityInAnarchy
|
t2_5oygg
|
Of course it matters what DB you have, and of course Redis doesn't solve all DB performance issues. There's a reason this "fadware" all piled onto a bunch of whitepapers coming out of places like Google, where there are actually problems too big for a single Postgres DB.
It's just that you're usually better off with something stable and well-understood. And if you ever grow so large you *can't* make a single well-tuned DB instance work, that's a nice problem to have -- at that point, you can probably afford the engineering effort to migrate to something that actually scales.
But before that... I mean, it's like learning you're about to become a parent and buying a double-decker tour bus to drive your kids around in one day because you *might* one day have a family big enough to need that.
| null |
0
|
1545276989
|
False
|
0
|
ec5pi1a
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec53kz3
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5pi1a/
|
1547832717
|
233
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Zebiusu
|
t2_ganqy
|
I just left a company that used post its for project management unironically. When I asked the pm what their backup plan was or what if someone screws with the notes they responded "I take a picture every day" like that made it any better. Bonus points for the department wide stand up we had weekly for 40 people to talk about projects that had nothing to do with the rest of the team.
| null |
0
|
1544124343
|
False
|
0
|
eb8ff3p
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7b3h6
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8ff3p/
|
1547270646
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Booty_Bumping
|
t2_93n4r
|
> Microsoft is moving toward open source
Largely a series of unimportant publicity stunts.
Where is the source code for Windows 10?
| null |
0
|
1545276997
|
False
|
0
|
ec5picg
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec4dbwi
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec5picg/
|
1547832721
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
PageFault
|
t2_40i2b
|
> It means don't ~~work~~ bank in Australia.
| null |
0
|
1544124357
|
False
|
0
|
eb8ffuq
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7dfr8
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8ffuq/
|
1547270656
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
grauenwolf
|
t2_570j
|
You are missing the point. Relational data isn't joins, its data that is related. For example a first name, last name, and social security number are related data.
| null |
0
|
1545277007
|
False
|
0
|
ec5pipt
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5p1zo
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5pipt/
|
1547832725
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Sciguystfm
|
t2_dg85d
|
Rip Atlassian
| null |
0
|
1544124358
|
False
|
0
|
eb8ffwj
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7ayj0
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8ffwj/
|
1547270656
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
rpd9803
|
t2_32tft
|
You can get ACID and schema-backed document DBs, they just aren't Free (e.g. https://marklogic.com)
| null |
0
|
1545277019
|
False
|
0
|
ec5pj8q
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5cwov
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5pj8q/
|
1547832732
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
1a1b
|
t2_f2nz3
|
The law doesn't need to be implemented in other countries. The law is designed to allow other countries to use Australia's new capability:
>The Director-General of Security or the chief officer of an interception agency may give a designated communications provider a notice, to be known as a technical assistance notice, that requires the provider to do acts or things by way of giving certain types of help to ASIO or the agency in relation to: **assisting the enforcement of the criminal laws in force in a foreign country, so far as those laws relate to serious foreign offences**
https://parlinfo.aph.gov.au:443/parlInfo/search/display/display.w3p;page=0;query=Id%3A%22legislation%2Famend%2Fr6195_amend_2ef65c47-7a59-45e1-9427-cf3e7400ef4d%22
| null |
0
|
1544124399
|
1544124668
|
0
|
eb8fi1g
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7hrwd
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8fi1g/
|
1547270682
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
quentech
|
t2_15l15h
|
> I feel like you are riding on a "mongo bad" fad from 5 years ago
I'd much prefer to just use something that hasn't been bad for more than 5 years, since there are plenty of options.
| null |
0
|
1545277077
|
False
|
0
|
ec5plmg
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec53rlv
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5plmg/
|
1547832761
|
17
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
drizzcool
|
t2_e72yk
|
Apologies, it is 3 years
| null |
0
|
1544124409
|
False
|
0
|
eb8fiih
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7govb
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8fiih/
|
1547270688
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
TommyTheTiger
|
t2_7hizh
|
Json is almost a pathologically inefficient way of storing data, since you need the "column names" stored with every value, which can often be an order of magnitude smaller than the column name string. I'd be curious how much a Jsonb column would take for comparison though
| null |
0
|
1545277085
|
False
|
0
|
ec5plxk
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5dg2h
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5plxk/
|
1547832765
|
15
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
redwall_hp
|
t2_1eplo
|
I guess nobody learned from IE last time
| null |
1
|
1544124443
|
False
|
0
|
eb8fk95
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb85ucw
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8fk95/
|
1547270711
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
grauenwolf
|
t2_570j
|
And all of the inherent problems from MySQL? No thank you.
| null |
0
|
1545277096
|
False
|
0
|
ec5pmfm
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5mprv
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5pmfm/
|
1547832771
|
10
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
After_Dark
|
t2_67jra
|
True, but on the flip side Chrome has removed or changed features based on what eventual standards were. See SPDY, PWAs and Chrome Apps. Google clearly seems fine with letting others in on decision making and respecting those decision
| null |
0
|
1544124506
|
False
|
0
|
eb8fnha
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb888zx
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8fnha/
|
1547270750
|
28
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
TheRedmanCometh
|
t2_elosw
|
What problems might those be? I've run some very backebd services supported by it
| null |
0
|
1545277140
|
False
|
0
|
ec5po93
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5pmfm
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5po93/
|
1547832794
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
JakeLifts
|
t2_z9l9s
|
I have been looking for a reason for my company to dump JIRA long before this. It's absolute shit.
| null |
1
|
1544124525
|
False
|
0
|
eb8foih
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7i48j
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8foih/
|
1547270763
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
quantifiableNonsense
|
t2_1shi9ft4
|
XML is actually pretty great if you take the time to learn it. There are a ton of tools related to XML, also XPath, XSLT, and DTDs are all super mature and easy to use (albeit a tad verbose).
| null |
0
|
1545277144
|
False
|
0
|
ec5poey
|
t3_a7nggt
| null | null |
t1_ec5kz5u
|
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec5poey/
|
1547832796
|
5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
EWJacobs
|
t2_bash7
|
Well yeah, but I don't pay for my database.
| null |
0
|
1544124616
|
False
|
0
|
eb8ft9v
|
t3_a3dobm
| null | null |
t1_eb7ujhm
|
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb8ft9v/
|
1547270822
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
grauenwolf
|
t2_570j
|
Give Mongo enough money and they'll let you use SQL via ODBC.
| null |
0
|
1545277194
|
False
|
0
|
ec5pqf4
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5ko9z
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5pqf4/
|
1547832820
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
After_Dark
|
t2_67jra
|
I didn't see anyone making this complaint when chrome first started to take market share with the stated goal of moving web standards forward faster
| null |
0
|
1544124644
|
False
|
0
|
eb8fus7
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb88dm3
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8fus7/
|
1547270840
|
9
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
neptoess
|
t2_x1ys8
|
This!!!
I know learning SQL or some other RDBMS isn’t the hot new shit, but I’m still blown away at how, when applied properly, a good database schema will just knock it out of the park. So many problems just disappear. I say this as someone who works in one of those trendy tech companies that everyone talks about all the time, so I see my fair share of document store, (Go|Python|Ansible) is a revolution to programmers, etc.
| null |
0
|
1545277251
|
False
|
0
|
ec5psqc
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5dg2h
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5psqc/
|
1547832849
|
8
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
JTenerife
|
t2_ekjnf
|
That was my first thought as well. Also, it's a good thing when Edge gets the same performance as Chrome. People don't have to install Chrome on Windows any more.
Only, I **want** Firefox to be the best browser. The first thing people should do after logging into their new Windows box is to install Firefox. For Mozilla the whole thing means stiff competition, that's sure.
| null |
0
|
1544124658
|
False
|
0
|
eb8fvke
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb88a51
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8fvke/
|
1547270850
|
15
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
armornick
|
t2_99jas
|
> Port it to Win32; it’s a somewhat trivial application, but how difficult could it be? Also see how many supported NT/CE architectures could be targeted.
In theory, you shouldn't even have to change any of your code. Microsoft has generally tried their best to keep compatibility between the API's of various versions of Windows.
| null |
0
|
1545277252
|
False
|
0
|
ec5pss3
|
t3_a7temr
| null | null |
t3_a7temr
|
/r/programming/comments/a7temr/win16_for_fun_and_probably_no_profit/ec5pss3/
|
1547832849
|
17
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Broccolis_of_Reddit
|
t2_mh11f
|
What was described is what the courts are tasked with in the United States. Interestingly, beginning sometime after the mid 1900s, dissatisfied political interests began a movement to capture this barrier to enacting extremely unpopular and legally questionable policy. To date, they've largely succeeded.
I'm not saying this is a bad idea - it is probably a good idea - but it needs to be carefully implemented. It seems to work in some countries (look at the differences).
| null |
0
|
1544124669
|
False
|
0
|
eb8fw4l
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7wuom
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8fw4l/
|
1547270857
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Booty_Bumping
|
t2_93n4r
|
Is this a joke? The only things MS have contributed to git are performance enhancements for visual studio integration.
And regardless. .NET, TypeScript, and git are extremely inconsequential compared to the rest of Microsoft's software. It is a publicity stunt and they clearly aren't intending to change jack shit.
| null |
0
|
1545277277
|
False
|
0
|
ec5ptqf
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec4240k
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec5ptqf/
|
1547832861
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
migueln6
|
t2_dfyu8
|
Then you know nothing, abandoning end to end means that authentication of encryption is less effective therefore...
| null |
0
|
1544124693
|
False
|
0
|
eb8fxf3
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7hllr
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8fxf3/
|
1547270872
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
CubsThisYear
|
t2_3uojw
|
I’d be interested to hear what’s helpful about this. Every time I hear people say things like this it usually is code for “I don’t want to spend time thinking about how to structure my data”. In my experience this is almost always time well spent.
| null |
0
|
1545277280
|
False
|
0
|
ec5ptu8
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5p1zo
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5ptu8/
|
1547832862
|
12
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
geodel
|
t2_amfab
|
Whaaa..t? I thought MS would go with next generation browser engine like Servo which is written in next generation language like Rust.
| null |
1
|
1544124713
|
False
|
0
|
eb8fygr
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t3_a3q1vh
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8fygr/
|
1547270886
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Booty_Bumping
|
t2_93n4r
|
They have not contributed anything to the kernel in years. The contributions they did give us were Hyper-V guest support. So we can more easily get locked into their closed ecosystem.
And before you say WSL, WSL is a proprietary *replacement* for the linux kernel, intended to give Microsoft more proprietary control over the open source ecosystem and drive up Azure subscriptions.
Stop lying.
| null |
0
|
1545277299
|
1545277516
|
0
|
ec5pulk
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec44a4d
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec5pulk/
|
1547832872
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
zevdg
|
t2_c0ywgq4
|
I know! The really exciting part of that IMO is [proxy support](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Proxy). Since proxies can't really be polyfilled, vue and other reactivity systems are really limited on what they can do with arrays and maps.
Even if you aren't supporting IE anymore, Edge is the only browser left that doesn't support shadow dom. That API is also impossible to polyfill, at least not without paying an unacceptable performance penalty. For now, if you support IE or Edge, you're stuck using the shadydom shim instead of real shadow dom API. I'll be really happy to see that go away.
&#x200B;
| null |
0
|
1544124720
|
False
|
0
|
eb8fyue
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8cqj7
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8fyue/
|
1547270890
|
19
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
O-Genius
|
t2_angxj
|
Storing json relationally is absolutely terrible when trying to parse objects with hundreds or thousands of values per key like in an underwriting model
| null |
0
|
1545277306
|
False
|
0
|
ec5puw4
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5dg2h
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5puw4/
|
1547832875
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
After_Dark
|
t2_67jra
|
Chrome has a history of changing and removing features to become compliant with standards and force developers to use standard features instead of chrome specific ones though, like Chrome Apps vs PWAs. It's hard to imagine Google looking to abuse this power when they've literally deprecated and disabled chrome-specific apps in the name of cross-browser standardization
| null |
1
|
1544124726
|
False
|
0
|
eb8fz6n
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8971l
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8fz6n/
|
1547270894
|
-5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
quentech
|
t2_15l15h
|
> Use Mongo to store documents. I'd stores the user settings for a SPA in Mongo. But most of the time, relational models work well enough for data that is guaranteed to be useful in a consistent format.
If I'm already using a relational database, I wouldn't add Mongo or some other document DB in just to store some things like user settings. Why take on the extra dependency? It doesn't make sense.
And you know what else is good for single key/document storage? Files. Presumably you're already using some file or blob storage that's more reliable, faster, and cheaper than Mongo et. al.
| null |
0
|
1545277308
|
False
|
0
|
ec5puym
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5cu8w
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5puym/
|
1547832876
|
16
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
tevert
|
t2_7sg8r
|
We have a slightly out-of-date hosted install. I'm going to be strongly advising my company not to take any upgrades.
| null |
0
|
1544124756
|
False
|
0
|
eb8g0vb
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb77jgv
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8g0vb/
|
1547270915
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
SanityInAnarchy
|
t2_5oygg
|
Postgres has had streaming replication for almost as long as Mongo has existed, and third-party solutions like Slony almost certainly predate Mongo. Meanwhile, MySQL has had streaming replication since at least 1995, and very likely also outperforms Mongo.
Since we agree Mongo is worse than Postgres, and since both are free, why would you use Mongo? I understand why you might want to use a document DB, and stuff like CouchDB seems interesting enough, but I truly don't understand the advantage of Mongo over something like Postgres with JSON columns.
| null |
0
|
1545277410
|
False
|
0
|
ec5pz6g
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec542zf
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5pz6g/
|
1547832929
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
EWJacobs
|
t2_bash7
|
There's not one wheel factory. Everyone can still build wheels.
| null |
1
|
1544124769
|
False
|
0
|
eb8g1k9
|
t3_a3htqg
| null | null |
t1_eb86hqt
|
/r/programming/comments/a3htqg/while_we_blink_we_loose_the_web/eb8g1k9/
|
1547270924
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Goofybud16
|
t2_510ae
|
>Seriously, guys, Internet Explorer won. Stop. Go back home.
Cause once one product becomes good, nothing else ever has the chance to be better.
| null |
0
|
1545277440
|
False
|
0
|
ec5q0cn
|
t3_a7r8qv
| null | null |
t1_ec555ts
|
/r/programming/comments/a7r8qv/eclipse_410_released/ec5q0cn/
|
1547832944
|
17
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
BenRayfield
|
t2_967s5
|
This kind of thing is why I try not to be an authority or have technical ability to backdoor things, since being an authority over a system is itself a government backdoor.
| null |
0
|
1544124786
|
False
|
0
|
eb8g2jv
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t3_a3kk7u
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8g2jv/
|
1547270936
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Treyzania
|
t2_8vzbi
|
I use Emacs for most stuff and it blows *pretty much everything* out of the water, but I still use Eclipse for Java since it does everything I need to and it does in natural ways that I really enjoy, and it's not overimposing like IntelliJ. Also it's fully libre.
| null |
0
|
1545277463
|
False
|
0
|
ec5q1aa
|
t3_a7r8qv
| null | null |
t1_ec5in5m
|
/r/programming/comments/a7r8qv/eclipse_410_released/ec5q1aa/
|
1547832955
|
7
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
geeky_username
|
t2_48dak
|
> Possibly unpopular opinion, but isn't this a good thing?
It's certainly better than current Edge.
But as others have said, there's alternatives like Mozilla or WebKit that aren't so closely associated with another monolith like Google.
| null |
1
|
1544124826
|
False
|
0
|
eb8g4qx
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb88a51
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8g4qx/
|
1547270963
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
TommyTheTiger
|
t2_7hizh
|
In postgres use EXPLAIN ANALYZE with http://explain.depesz.com - explain tells you the plan but not the time taken on each node. Also sadly even with Analyze the output is a little hard to parse in table form, because the costs for each node include the costs of all subnodes. You really need the exclusive costs to see what is taking too long. Of course you can still look for rows removed by join filter, external disk sorts, or other common and easily solvable problems from the table output, but you won't see those without the analyze either.
| null |
0
|
1545277474
|
False
|
0
|
ec5q1r6
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5etwk
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5q1r6/
|
1547832961
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
After_Dark
|
t2_67jra
|
Jumping on to this comment to remind people about how Google listened when the open source community got upset about the proprietary blob for "Okay Google" detection shipped with Chromium and removed it. If Google is willing to bend to just the community in general's wishes, it's hard to imagine them really fighting to keep Microsoft out of decision making for Chromium.
| null |
1
|
1544124888
|
False
|
0
|
eb8g86t
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb89j9n
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8g86t/
|
1547271034
|
-6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
stack-compression
|
t2_1w1eet1b
|
Well at some point your nicely normalized collection of records will be joined together to represent some distinct composite piece of data in the application code - that's pretty much a document.
| null |
0
|
1545277502
|
False
|
0
|
ec5q2uy
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5ptu8
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5q2uy/
|
1547832975
|
7
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Ettubrutusu
|
t2_1qi8jd60
|
Okay interesting.
In reality, predictable performance for a single query running in isolation is kind of useless for most scenarios I would guess. I think most people need something which gives predictable perf when running various queries at the same time.
| null |
0
|
1544124907
|
False
|
0
|
eb8g98n
|
t3_a3dobm
| null | null |
t1_eb8e2up
|
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb8g98n/
|
1547271047
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
24llamas
|
t2_4l50x
|
Very unlikely. Those are transport layers (okay, well, SPDY isn't as it's in the application layer but if you squint it kinda makes sense to look at HTTP - and SPDY - as a transport layer for HTML. There's probably a better word for this but I can't think of it).
That means if the browser doesn't support them, you just don't get data full stop. Or, well, you don't get data via them - everything falls back to HTTP 1.1 or whatever.
As such, it's unlikely that these are the cause of these sorts of slowdowns - it's much more likely to be google electing to use specific javascript / HTML constructs which work fine in Chrome, but perform poorly in other browsers.
You can see this in the post that kicked this all off:
> For example, they recently added a hidden empty div over YouTube videos that causes our hardware acceleration fast-path to bail (should now be fixed in Win10 Oct update).
That's not SPDY or QUIC. That's just HTML trickery.
| null |
0
|
1545277573
|
False
|
0
|
ec5q5qh
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec4b027
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec5q5qh/
|
1547833011
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
holo-graphic
|
t2_jn99vin
|
This whole thing is so stupid.
| null |
0
|
1544124936
|
False
|
0
|
eb8gaqq
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t3_a3kk7u
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8gaqq/
|
1547271065
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
coworker
|
t2_46sia
|
I think your statistics and the other poster's comment is colored by your own shitty work experience. There's a whole other world of enterprise companies that can and do store shit tons of data for various reasons. They don't think they are special. They just have a real business need and the money to meet it. Automatically dismissing my original comment is simply ignorant.
| null |
0
|
1545277582
|
False
|
0
|
ec5q64y
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5og27
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5q64y/
|
1547833015
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
rtbrsp
|
t2_jyw3n
|
My company would find a way to block all of it just to keep me miserable
| null |
0
|
1544124980
|
False
|
0
|
eb8gd6h
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8bj4f
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8gd6h/
|
1547271096
|
60
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
bautin
|
t2_3cri3
|
Posting this in another subreddit won’t make the content any more insightful or relevant.
| null |
0
|
1545277657
|
False
|
0
|
ec5q9a8
|
t3_a7s9cg
| null | null |
t3_a7s9cg
|
/r/programming/comments/a7s9cg/is_a_computer_science_degree_worth_it_today_my/ec5q9a8/
|
1547833055
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
SpicymeLLoN
|
t2_kctub15
|
Wow. Invasion of privacy much?
| null |
0
|
1544124993
|
False
|
0
|
eb8gdz8
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t3_a3kk7u
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8gdz8/
|
1547271105
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Booty_Bumping
|
t2_93n4r
|
>I also like how the implication is that the day a new president is elected, your whole view of the military changes. Lol.
It doesn't. But it sure as hell makes an already frightening situation a whole lot more frightening.
| null |
0
|
1545277661
|
False
|
0
|
ec5q9hp
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec4kgck
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec5q9hp/
|
1547833056
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
geeky_username
|
t2_48dak
|
If they can "fix" the pathing/file system on Windows - I don't think I'd ever need Linux or MacOS again
Unfortunately, I think that's one of the last bastions of backwards compatibility that's unlikely to change.
| null |
0
|
1544125012
|
False
|
0
|
eb8gf0i
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb85lho
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8gf0i/
|
1547271119
|
18
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
chasecaleb
|
t2_c8vpk
|
That might have been true a decade ago, but that's incorrect. Since you used AWS as an example, look at their government cloud.
| null |
0
|
1545277745
|
False
|
0
|
ec5qcyi
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec56hjg
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5qcyi/
|
1547833099
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Ameisen
|
t2_5qad2
|
I'm aware. I was speaking in a general sense as to why branch prediction exists, since his question betrayed a lack of understanding of the purpose of it.
However, heavily-branched shaders can certainly 'effectively' stall since the GPU ends up incapable of executing all paths concurrently.
There are also GPUs that *cannot* perform concurrent execution of branching paths (particularly in the console area, particularly in the last generation, particularly one called the PS3 - boy, how I hated writing for it). Branches were a *lot* of fun, there. I had written a rudimentary version of Forward+ shading for the Xbox 360 (and it actually worked fairly well, though the implementation was weird as hell)... but it didn't work well at all on the PS3... for two reasons:
1. The PS3's GPU is incapable of performing dependent data access - that is, it cannot read a texture, and then read *another* texture with an index based upon that other texture's data. It ends up generating really stupid code to do it.
2. The PS3's GPU doesn't perform concurrent branching in any sane way.
So, the 360 generated perfectly normal GPU bitcode for Forward+-, the PS3s ended up being around 3,000,000 instructions. It basically turned all potential options, which were effectively *nested*, into a if/else if/... set for *every possible permutation. Surprisingly, this didn't run well.
I was one of the senior rendering engineers at my last company.
Current GPUs, IIRC, do have rudimentary branch prediction, but in general they haven't benefited as they require the shaders to have at least somewhat deterministic execution times so the shader units can be scheduled.
| null |
0
|
1544125057
|
False
|
0
|
eb8ghhu
|
t3_a2oxxm
| null | null |
t1_eb7fcz0
|
/r/programming/comments/a2oxxm/nvidia_physx_sdk_has_gone_open_source_3clause_bsd/eb8ghhu/
|
1547271149
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
grauenwolf
|
t2_570j
|
What's that have to do with MongoDB? You could have done the same thing with XML columns well over a decade ago.
In fact, I was doing that back around 2000 with SQL Server.
| null |
0
|
1545277747
|
False
|
0
|
ec5qd0x
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5ic40
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5qd0x/
|
1547833100
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
EWJacobs
|
t2_bash7
|
How is having 5 teams looking for exploits in 5 engines better than 5 teams looking for exploits in one engine. It's not like Microsoft is going to lay off its developers and hope Google picks up the slack.
| null |
1
|
1544125081
|
False
|
0
|
eb8girk
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8czf3
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8girk/
|
1547271164
|
-4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Superpickle18
|
t2_kzk9p
|
[Get informed ;)](https://techcrunch.com/2018/04/16/microsoft-built-its-own-custom-linux-kernel-for-its-new-iot-service/)
| null |
0
|
1545277755
|
False
|
0
|
ec5qdcm
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec5pulk
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec5qdcm/
|
1547833104
|
-2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
__redruM
|
t2_889ob
|
Middle mangement is pretty dense, but if you are lucky they will think you are inept and pawn you off on a different project. Can’t backdoor software you aren’t working on.
| null |
0
|
1544125122
|
False
|
0
|
eb8gl0l
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb852q7
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8gl0l/
|
1547271192
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
loganthemanster
|
t2_abjn0
|
Interesting off topic fact: Microsoft Teams has a web client that supports video calls in Edge only. But it actually works perfectly in other browsers and also on Linux if you change the user agent to edge. The premise of MS complaining about others trying to cripple their browser seems a bit hypocritical.
| null |
0
|
1545277799
|
False
|
0
|
ec5qf57
|
t3_a7k0an
| null | null |
t3_a7k0an
|
/r/programming/comments/a7k0an/did_google_cripple_edges_youtube_performance/ec5qf57/
|
1547833127
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
geeky_username
|
t2_48dak
|
Edge is still IE.
Google is still "Don't be evil".
The Cubs never won the World Series in 2016
| null |
0
|
1544125167
|
False
|
0
|
eb8gnin
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb88gwv
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8gnin/
|
1547271223
|
63
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
5yrup
|
t2_66yj7
|
If you take a look at that article, he's only talking about data loss when using shared data sets with casual consistency without majority write concern. If you're running MongoDB as a source of truth, you wouldn't be running MongoDB like that. Other configurations did not have such problems.
| null |
0
|
1545277810
|
False
|
0
|
ec5qfkj
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec589p0
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5qfkj/
|
1547833132
|
7
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
0b_0101_001_1010
|
t2_155rs2
|
> Is there a reason why you wouldn't just use all LLVM when doing a --release ?
That would take longer to compile. Sometimes you need both fast compile times and good performance, e.g., if you are developing a game and need to edit-compile-debug. Often most of the CPU time is spent on a small fraction of the program.
> Or are there optimizations that cranelift can do that LLVM can't do?
AFAIK Cranelift is just a machine code generator, it does not perform optimizations.
| null |
0
|
1544125178
|
False
|
0
|
eb8go3h
|
t3_a3ps00
| null | null |
t1_eb8eaju
|
/r/programming/comments/a3ps00/rust_2018_is_here_but_what_is_it/eb8go3h/
|
1547271230
|
10
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
BlueShellOP
|
t2_cxgta
|
And, I don't care if you do.
| null |
0
|
1545277811
|
False
|
0
|
ec5qfm9
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5cjue
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5qfm9/
|
1547833133
|
20
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
drizzcool
|
t2_e72yk
|
>Experts in the industry say this could see people either jailed for simply doing their jobs, or **fired** for essentially hacking their own company by installing vulnerabilities in programs.
| null |
0
|
1544125207
|
False
|
0
|
eb8gpmx
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb84vsz
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8gpmx/
|
1547271249
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
HarwellDekatron
|
t2_v6p5z5j
|
I guess I live in a split world. I've spent a significant amount of time over the years making my usual shell and editor (my laptop) work exactly as I want them, and my servers have just enough configuration to make the occasional debugging session easier (tmux + vim instead of vim-tiny + httpie).
As for vim plugins I use on a daily basis, these are the ones that I feel have improved my life substantially:
" Integrate with the outside world
Plug 'jmcantrell/vim-virtualenv', {'for': 'python'}
Plug 'mileszs/ack.vim', {'on': 'Ack'}
Plug 'mantiz/vim-plugin-dirsettings'
Plug 'tpope/vim-fugitive'
Plug 'airblade/vim-gitgutter', {'on': 'GitGutterToggle'}
" Language support
Plug 'davidhalter/jedi-vim', {'for': 'python'}
Plug 'fatih/vim-go', {'for': 'go'}
Plug 'freitass/todo.txt-vim'
Plug 'sheerun/vim-polyglot'
Plug 'ekalinin/Dockerfile.vim'
Plug 'hashivim/vim-terraform', {'for': 'terraform'}
Plug 'fatih/vim-hclfmt', {'for': 'terraform'}
" Make it nice
Plug 'w0rp/ale'
Plug 'ctrlpvim/ctrlp.vim'
Plug 'vim-airline/vim-airline'
Plug 'vim-airline/vim-airline-themes'
Plug 'ap/vim-buftabline'
Plug 'godlygeek/csapprox'
Plug 'sjl/gundo.vim', { 'on': 'GundoToggle' }
Plug 'moll/vim-bbye'
Plug 'nathanaelkane/vim-indent-guides', {'on': 'IndentGuidesToggle'}
Plug 'tomtom/tcomment_vim'
Plug 'scrooloose/nerdtree', { 'on': ['NERDTreeToggle', 'NERDTreeFind'] }
Plug 'Xuyuanp/nerdtree-git-plugin'
Plug 'editorconfig/editorconfig-vim'
Plug 'kshenoy/vim-signature'
Plug 'tpope/vim-vinegar'
Plug 'tpope/vim-dispatch'
" Make working with text easier
Plug 'mattn/emmet-vim', {'for': 'html'}
Plug 'alvan/vim-closetag', {'for': ['html', 'xml', 'markdown', 'php', 'htmldjango.html', 'xsl', 'mako']}
Plug 'kana/vim-textobj-user'
Plug 'bps/vim-textobj-python', {'for': 'python'}
Plug 'kana/vim-textobj-indent'
Plug 'tmhedberg/matchit'
Plug 'tpope/vim-repeat'
Plug 'tpope/vim-surround'
Plug 'SirVer/ultisnips'
Plug 'honza/vim-snippets'
Plug 'bkad/CamelCaseMotion'
Plug 'bronson/vim-trailing-whitespace'
Plug 'terryma/vim-multiple-cursors'
Plug 'terryma/vim-expand-region'
Plug 'godlygeek/tabular'
Plug 'Raimondi/delimitMate'
Couple that with some configuration for the CtrlP plugin and you've got a pretty decent text editor with excellent code navigation features. The language support for both Python and Go in particular are great, supporting "go to definition" and so on. I jump between Go, Python, Ansible and Terraform all day long and getting automatic formatting and linting is a huge timesaver.
BTW, if you want to limit your space/tabs customizations but need to use different settings for different projects the editorconfig-vim is perfect.
| null |
0
|
1545277825
|
False
|
0
|
ec5qg6w
|
t3_a7r8qv
| null | null |
t1_ec5lef2
|
/r/programming/comments/a7r8qv/eclipse_410_released/ec5qg6w/
|
1547833139
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
larperdoodle
|
t2_9gi6e
|
Ok, so the new rules holds the employees responsible for adding the backdoors instead of the company, and allows the company to fire the employee for obeying the law?
| null |
0
|
1544125244
|
False
|
0
|
eb8grlt
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb8ey1b
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8grlt/
|
1547271273
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
nemec
|
t2_3r7wz
|
You're not wrong, but The Guardian is literally storing "documents" in there. It's a far, far more appropriate use case than 95% of other document db users.
| null |
0
|
1545277832
|
False
|
0
|
ec5qgig
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5dg2h
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5qgig/
|
1547833143
|
120
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Sciguystfm
|
t2_dg85d
|
[this is a "fun" take on it](https://twitter.com/alfiedotwtf/status/1070047303275175936)
| null |
0
|
1544125244
|
False
|
0
|
eb8grn2
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7xx4e
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8grn2/
|
1547271273
|
5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ander_bsd
|
t2_mrrn82w
|
Netscape releazed Mozilla after Netscape 7 I think, Mozilla was bloated because it had a kitchen sink: Mail, Browser, IRC client and some installers even had AOL.
Thus, a fork based on Gecko began: Firebird, then Phoenix (or were they in the opposite order)?, and finally, Firefox.
Funny enough, Seamonkey was born from that Mozilla suite, and often uses far less resources than Firefox. With Firefox 60, they speed up things a lot, but, for legacy machines, Seamonkey rocks (and you won't have to install Thunderbird separately).
>It is not because they are penalizing you for not using Chrome, it's because your browser doesn't have enough user share to get a special check.
I know how it works, thanks. The issue is Vimb itself sends an UA based on WebKit. If you don't specify either Safari or Chrome, say goodbye to speed in a lot of WebGL sites. Even the basic ones as Street View.
| null |
0
|
1545277948
|
False
|
0
|
ec5ql53
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec5o7mq
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec5ql53/
|
1547833230
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
tevert
|
t2_7sg8r
|
Citizens can not change society. Government changes society.
Citizens can change government though ;)
| null |
0
|
1544125251
|
False
|
0
|
eb8gs0x
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7fac4
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8gs0x/
|
1547271278
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
vitorgrs
|
t2_pjahg
|
https://github.com/Microsoft/VFSForGit
| null |
0
|
1545278032
|
False
|
0
|
ec5qohu
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec5ptqf
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec5qohu/
|
1547833272
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
lurebat
|
t2_6pltw
|
I'm really glad it's finally here, and I am looking forward for more to come (async/await anyone?).
But I still dislike the new site, the moto is better than the one that was introduced, but it's just weird to have a website for a programming language with no code sample on the front page.
In face, the only code sample in the "Get Started" is kinda ugly and doesn't really show the elegance of the language.
[D's site](https://dlang.org/) is an example for a great programming language site.
| null |
0
|
1544125268
|
False
|
0
|
eb8gswx
|
t3_a3q3e2
| null | null |
t3_a3q3e2
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q3e2/rust_131_and_rust_2018/eb8gswx/
|
1547271290
|
51
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1545278076
|
False
|
0
|
ec5qqah
|
t3_a7rit7
| null | null |
t3_a7rit7
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec5qqah/
|
1547833294
|
10
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1544125278
|
False
|
0
|
eb8gthm
|
t3_a3crqx
| null | null |
t1_eb8dgw1
|
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb8gthm/
|
1547271296
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
haloguysm1th
|
t2_7dm04
|
I'd recommend hackers: hero's of the computer revolution. It covers most of the early rise of computers and programming.
| null |
0
|
1545278094
|
False
|
0
|
ec5qr16
|
t3_a7m6jc
| null | null |
t1_ec5cqg4
|
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec5qr16/
|
1547833303
|
5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Daneel_Trevize
|
t2_dxefp
|
Because when (not if) they find an exploit, it'll only be for ~20% of the web, not 100%.
| null |
0
|
1544125377
|
False
|
0
|
eb8gyum
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8girk
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8gyum/
|
1547271363
|
8
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Raonak
|
t2_9jbmm
|
That doesn't really sound malicious or anything.
Their web design team were probably the ones who designed the prototype component functionality, and chrome implemented it. Browsers adding prototype features that havent been standardised yet isn't a rare thing at all.
The web team probably had the redesign ready before the standards got finalised.
It's not an "amazing coincidence", rather it's 2 parts of their business that overlap a lot.
It'd be a weird thing if chrome didn't implement their prototype functionality.
| null |
0
|
1545278151
|
False
|
0
|
ec5qt9u
|
t3_a7k0an
| null | null |
t1_ec4hjsa
|
/r/programming/comments/a7k0an/did_google_cripple_edges_youtube_performance/ec5qt9u/
|
1547833331
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
HeimrArnadalr
|
t2_klolx
|
Australia lost a war against wild emus, they're not exactly a stellar example of a superpowered military.
| null |
0
|
1544125384
|
False
|
0
|
eb8gz9h
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb89i5v
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8gz9h/
|
1547271368
|
7
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
RandomDamage
|
t2_8uaun
|
That's covered in the article. Using JSON allowed them to manage the transition more effectively since they weren't changing the DB \*and\* the data model at the same time.
Since they couldn't normalize the DB in Mongo, the obvious choice was to echo the MongoDB format in Postgres, then make model changes later.
| null |
0
|
1545278168
|
False
|
0
|
ec5qtxi
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5dg2h
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5qtxi/
|
1547833338
|
37
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
bheklilr
|
t2_3n7in
|
I love that rust is taking such a proactive approach towards backwards compatibility. While it might result in the compiler creeping up in size over time, the fact that older code will remain forever compatible with newer code is amazing to me. It's a solution to the Python 2/3 problem before it becomes a real issue. Congrats to all the people who worked hard to make this possible!
Also, never having to type extern crate or macro_use again will be great for beginners coming to the language, and for every day practitioners. I find it amazing that this language has been so able to adapt and optimize itself without radically changing how it looks. Things like the try syntax, NLL improvements, cargo fix, etc just goes to show how big of a deal ergonomics are to the core dev team.
| null |
0
|
1544125387
|
False
|
0
|
eb8gzf7
|
t3_a3q3e2
| null | null |
t3_a3q3e2
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q3e2/rust_131_and_rust_2018/eb8gzf7/
|
1547271370
|
16
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
calsosta
|
t2_5hqbj
|
Here is Henry Baker saying the same thing about relational databases in a letter to ACM nearly 30 years ago. Apologies for the formatting. *Also, should mention "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny" is only a theory not fact.*
>Dear ACM Forum:
>I had great difficulty in controlling my mirth while I read the self-congratulatory article "Database Systems: Achievements and Opportunities" in the October, 1991, issue of the Communications, because its authors consider relational databases to be one of the three major achievements of the past two decades. As a designer of commercial manufacturing applications on IBM mainframes in the late 1960's and early 1970's, I can categorically state that relational databases set the commercial data processing industry back at least ten years and wasted many of the billions of dollars that were spent on data processing. With the recent arrival of object-oriented databases, the industry may finally achieve some of the promises which were made 20 years ago about the capabilities of computers to automate and improve organizations.
>Biological systems follow the rule "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny", which states that every higher-level organism goes through a developmental history which mirrors the evolutionary development of the species itself. Data processing systems seem to have followed the same rule in perpetuating the Procrustean bed of the "unit record". Virtually all commercial applications in the 1960's were based on files of fixed-length records of multiple fields, which were selected and merged. Codd's relational theory dressed up these concepts with the trappings of mathematics (wow, we lowly Cobol programmers are now mathematicians!) by calling files relations, records rows, fields domains, and merges joins. To a close approximation, established data processing practise became database theory by simply renaming all of the concepts. Because "algebraic relation theory" was much more respectible than "data processing", database theoreticians could now get tenure at respectible schools whose names did not sound like the "Control Data Institute".
Unfortunately, relational databases performed a task that didn't need doing; e.g., these databases were orders of magnitude slower than the "flat files" they replaced, and they could not begin to handle the requirements of real-time transaction systems. In mathematical parlance, they made trivial problems obviously trivial, but did nothing to solve the really hard data processing problems. In fact, the advent of relational databases made the hard problems harder, because the application engineer now had to convince his non-technical management that the relational database had no clothes.
>Why were relational databases such a Procrustean bed? Because organizations, budgets, products, etc., are hierarchical; hierarchies require transitive closures for their "explosions"; and transitive closures cannot be expressed within the classical Codd model using only a finite number of joins (I wrote a paper in 1971 discussing this problem). Perhaps this sounds like 20-20 hindsight, but most manufacturing databases of the late 1960's were of the "Bill of Materials" type, which today would be characterized as "object-oriented". Parts "explosions" and budgets "explosions" were the norm, and these databases could easily handle the complexity of large amounts of CAD-equivalent data. These databases could also respond quickly to "real-time" requests for information, because the data was readily accessible through pointers and hash tables--without performing "joins".
>I shudder to think about the large number of man-years that were devoted during the 1970's and 1980's to "optimizing" relational databases to the point where they could remotely compete in the marketplace. It is also a tribute to the power of the universities, that by teaching only relational databases, they could convince an entire generation of computer scientists that relational databases were more appropriate than "ad hoc" databases such as flat files and Bills of Materials.
>Computing history will consider the past 20 years as a kind of Dark Ages of commercial data processing in which the religious zealots of the Church of Relationalism managed to hold back progress until a Renaissance rediscovered the Greece and Rome of pointer-based databases. Database research has produced a number of good results, but the relational database is not one of them.
>Sincerely,
>Henry G. Baker, Ph.D.
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dexx4d
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t2_4bmbf
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I wonder how much government cutbacks contribute to advisors being more biased in favour of the industries they advise on.
If the government could pay enough to get a very well qualified advisor that doesn't need that industry job afterwards, would they be more impartial?
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yawaramin
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t2_77bue
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How does 'NoSQL' solve the problem of 'large amounts of non relational data'?
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ec5qus9
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uptimefordays
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Apple is too small to be evil.
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False
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eb8h5kx
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/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8h5kx/
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-54
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Frizkie
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t2_4ptdg
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Man, no love for Ruby.
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ec5qvha
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/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec5qvha/
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burritochan
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oh shit
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eb8h70i
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AloticChoon
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Their point is that they love a challenge and would often try to kill flies by firing a cannon.
/s
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ec5r0lf
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t3_a7nggt
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/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec5r0lf/
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PiratesSayMoo
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t2_1ceptnl3
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Yeah, I'd choose one of the Atomic\* classes over using volatile in nearly every circumstance, but I figured I'd mention it to be complete.
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/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb8h82o/
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yawaramin
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t2_77bue
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You say it's trivial in NoSQL databases, but the fact is you described it in terms of the SQL `where` or `order by` clauses, which tells you what the gold standard is for ease of use.
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/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5r72a/
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