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False
|
CryZe92
|
t2_f5xkf
|
I feel like rust is missing a dev profile. Usually you want to have a mix of fast code and short compile time cycles, but every now and then you are tracking a bug, so you use the debug profile, where the code is fairly slow, but you have more debug information. And once you are ready to publish the product, you compile with release where you have the longest compile time, but also the most optimizations.
So it would be debug for finding bugs, dev for just general development and release for a final compile before publishing.
| null |
0
|
1544127863
|
1544128099
|
0
|
eb8kq3l
|
t3_a3ps00
| null | null |
t1_eb8go3h
|
/r/programming/comments/a3ps00/rust_2018_is_here_but_what_is_it/eb8kq3l/
|
1547273122
|
9
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
AttackOfTheThumbs
|
t2_79zad
|
> Json is almost a pathologically inefficient way of storing data
I mean, isn't that kind of the point? To make it more humanly readable? It's not necessary at all in their case, but it seems to me like json is doing the job it was designed for.
| null |
0
|
1545284631
|
False
|
0
|
ec5x3m0
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5plxk
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5x3m0/
|
1547836274
|
9
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
jmnugent
|
t2_3bcvj
|
> exploits are found and reported much faster since more developers are focused on the product.
This also only works if Users update their shit... which they're notoriously bad at doing.
| null |
1
|
1544127983
|
False
|
0
|
eb8kwss
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8k1sy
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8kwss/
|
1547273205
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
pihkal
|
t2_p6d5
|
Not the parent, but I suspect the issue might not be execution time, but programmer time, i.e., how long does it take to write a script to generate the report?
| null |
0
|
1545284640
|
False
|
0
|
ec5x3wv
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5uk2v
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5x3wv/
|
1547836277
|
5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Asmor
|
t2_812lr
|
> That would be near impossible.
One of my coworkers used to be a lawyer. So there's at least one instance of some random guy who's well-versed in both law and software engineering.
| null |
0
|
1544127991
|
False
|
0
|
eb8kx7h
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7kipf
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8kx7h/
|
1547273209
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
AttackOfTheThumbs
|
t2_79zad
|
Woahh, PHP can handle multiplication now? Without crashing?
| null |
0
|
1545284720
|
False
|
0
|
ec5x6nd
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5s9xb
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5x6nd/
|
1547836312
|
-6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Murkantilism
|
t2_553bq
|
Or just refuse the government's unlawful request, get arrested, hope your company has the money and lawyers to go to bat for you and take this shit all the way to the Upside Down Supreme Court or whatever they call it down under.
Not an easy choice to make, but I hope somebody does make it.
Edit: before anyone says it, yes as of today it's technically a lawful request but you know what I mean, the Supreme Court in the US can overturn "laws" passed by Congress.
| null |
0
|
1544128009
|
False
|
0
|
eb8ky7y
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb83fjn
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8ky7y/
|
1547273222
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
The_Monocle_Debacle
|
t2_1e98baec
|
Yeah, which is only literally most of the actual industry. It's easy to forget the boring everyday stuff that isn't flashy startups.
| null |
0
|
1545284721
|
False
|
0
|
ec5x6o2
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5ajhc
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5x6o2/
|
1547836313
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
EnaiSiaion
|
t2_bx4mv
|
"LOL, remember that time Trump ran for president?"
| null |
0
|
1544128019
|
False
|
0
|
eb8kysa
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8gnin
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8kysa/
|
1547273228
|
56
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
AttackOfTheThumbs
|
t2_79zad
|
I learned Postgres about a decade ago. At the time I was wondering why we didn't learn one of the more popular ones (like mssql or mysql), but in the long run, I think I benefited it from it, even though I only work with mssql now.
| null |
0
|
1545284788
|
False
|
0
|
ec5x8xw
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec50wqk
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5x8xw/
|
1547836341
|
8
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
After_Dark
|
t2_67jra
|
God I wish, can you imagine how good a gig it would be to just be on reddit all day and skew the truth a bit?
I'm not claiming, nor have I claimed, that Google is good, moral, or working in the interest of anyone but Google.
I _am_ claiming that Google has a clear history of working in favor of forwarding web standards and celebrating other browsers implementing web standards. Google is a web company, and they benefit from being able to build more advanced websites, so it's in their interest to make sure those websites are accessible to the most people. Sure they'd prefer you use chrome, but the important thing is that you use gmail/maps/youtube/etc, and a good way to get other major web players to sign off on their ideas is to be a respectable open source community member. It's a strategy they've used for a long time (make good open source things and people will use those things), so why would they stop now?
| null |
1
|
1544128050
|
False
|
0
|
eb8l0jc
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8isxj
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8l0jc/
|
1547273250
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
CSI_Tech_Dept
|
t2_3pr1l
|
There is TEXT field type exactly for this purpose. Actually even articles have schema. You have article title, maybe subtitle, authors, keywords, date location and then text.
| null |
0
|
1545284877
|
False
|
0
|
ec5xbz4
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5qgig
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5xbz4/
|
1547836379
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
politeeks
|
t2_147k9t
|
Sure.. but that's the case with any piece of software. Not using chromium won't fix that
| null |
0
|
1544128050
|
False
|
0
|
eb8l0jx
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8kwss
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8l0jx/
|
1547273250
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
AttackOfTheThumbs
|
t2_79zad
|
Ah, that makes more sense. I was confused because I'd never heard anyone say ock for ocaml before.
Most professors at my uni loved ocaml.
| null |
0
|
1545284882
|
False
|
0
|
ec5xc5e
|
t3_a7rit7
| null | null |
t1_ec5vnip
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec5xc5e/
|
1547836380
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
FOSSilized_Daemon
|
t2_1s6hh8y7
|
I hate phones, so of course :)
| null |
0
|
1544128056
|
False
|
0
|
eb8l0ws
|
t3_a32foa
| null | null |
t1_eb8jbod
|
/r/programming/comments/a32foa/announcing_open_source_of_wpf_windows_forms_and/eb8l0ws/
|
1547273255
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
The_Monocle_Debacle
|
t2_1e98baec
|
I've found that a lot of problems and stupid fads in programming seem to stem from many coders doing everything they can to avoid learning or writing any SQL. For some people it's almost a pathological avoidance that leads to some really bad 'solutions' that are just huge overly complicated work-arounds to avoid any SQL.
| null |
0
|
1545285004
|
False
|
0
|
ec5xgd2
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5d76j
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5xgd2/
|
1547836433
|
8
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
shawncplus
|
t2_39mgy
|
There is just no way you can say that with a straight face while Safari and Mobile Safari exist, they occupy the exact same place in the market and closed-down philosophy and uncooperative nature that IE held.
| null |
0
|
1544128063
|
False
|
0
|
eb8l18q
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb86g37
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8l18q/
|
1547273259
|
36
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
setuid_w00t
|
t2_mbqg
|
Funny that nobody said C++, go, rust or D. I think professors are a bit of an odd group to ask in that they probably write very little code.
| null |
0
|
1545285060
|
False
|
0
|
ec5xi9a
|
t3_a7rit7
| null | null |
t3_a7rit7
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec5xi9a/
|
1547836455
|
16
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
jmnugent
|
t2_3bcvj
|
True enough.
| null |
0
|
1544128077
|
False
|
0
|
eb8l21i
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8l0jx
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8l21i/
|
1547273269
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
orangesunshine
|
t2_3a1la
|
>I'm curious what the net result will ultimately be. Postgres is fantastic, but I believe its been said that they are "the second best database for everything"... which makes me question if there isn't something thats a better fit and/or if they will end up regretting the decision.
What's notable is they didn't migrate because of issues with MongoDB ... they migrated because they wanted a "managed" solution.
Given *how* they are using PostgreSQL I have *serious* doubts that they will save any time or money by moving to PostgreSQL.
They'll probably spend the next 5+ years changing document structures to be more performant .. at some point they'll hit a wall ... and end up migrating over to the next thing.
I'm not sure why they went with SQL in the first place if they never had any issues with it ... this whole thing sounds like a serious case of mismanagement of tech decisions ... as do nearly all of these articles.
| null |
0
|
1545285086
|
False
|
0
|
ec5xj5m
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5360t
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5xj5m/
|
1547836467
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
spacejack2114
|
t2_fp92m
|
Can you read uninitialized texture memory from WebGL or does this have to be done in a native program?
| null |
0
|
1544128084
|
False
|
0
|
eb8l2el
|
t3_a3qg87
| null | null |
t3_a3qg87
|
/r/programming/comments/a3qg87/stealing_webpages_rendered_on_your_browser_by/eb8l2el/
|
1547273273
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
The_Monocle_Debacle
|
t2_1e98baec
|
Yeah when you get past a certain level of complexity in your data model denormalizing it is a terrible idea.
| null |
0
|
1545285175
|
False
|
0
|
ec5xm40
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5umrk
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5xm40/
|
1547836503
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
SoulKingTrex
|
t2_91rq9
|
I'm going to go ahead and be immature about this. When I saw the coding of buttonForgroundColor I honestly thought it was saying butt on foreground color
| null |
0
|
1544128292
|
False
|
0
|
eb8ldst
|
t3_a32r4e
| null | null |
t3_a32r4e
|
/r/programming/comments/a32r4e/announcing_visual_studio_2019_preview_1/eb8ldst/
|
1547273442
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
fuzzylittlemanpeach8
|
t2_12x13e
|
Okay thats a bit anal but sure. "Written with javascript using a node server"
| null |
0
|
1545285307
|
False
|
0
|
ec5xqgw
|
t3_a5f7o3
| null | null |
t1_ebmaem0
|
/r/programming/comments/a5f7o3/reeves_outdid_himself_in_this_one_drone_swarms/ec5xqgw/
|
1547836557
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
wubwub
|
t2_35kke
|
Exactly! So the back-door that is not a back-door should only open if the flag is set to '0', exactly as the law intends.
| null |
0
|
1544128296
|
False
|
0
|
eb8le0q
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb83rob
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8le0q/
|
1547273445
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
thehydralisk
|
t2_9utse
|
I switched already, it will just be to hard later on so I may as well get used to it now. It sucks. WHY is there no financial tab and pinning like Inbox has? I've actually missed a bill because of this..
| null |
0
|
1545285411
|
False
|
0
|
ec5xtw7
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec4gwi5
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec5xtw7/
|
1547836599
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
m50d
|
t2_6q02y
|
> It’s also impossible to disprove a Christian god.
Just point to the contradictions given in the description of such, no?
> Is it possible to disprove a nondeterministic universe?
If we had an accepted theory of everything that was deterministic I would consider that proof of a deterministic universe. As a simplified example, you can prove that the output of a pseudorandom number generator is deterministic by showing the algorithm for that pseudorandom number generator - but you can never prove that the output of a true random number generator wasn't generated by some unknown pseudorandom number generator.
| null |
0
|
1544128302
|
False
|
0
|
eb8lede
|
t3_a3crqx
| null | null |
t1_eb8baek
|
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb8lede/
|
1547273450
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
LimEJET
|
t2_4zfyw
|
So, a bytecode compiler?
| null |
0
|
1545285425
|
False
|
0
|
ec5xuc9
|
t3_a7m6jc
| null | null |
t1_ec5o5b3
|
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec5xuc9/
|
1547836605
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
EnaiSiaion
|
t2_bx4mv
|
Chromium is open source. Anyone can look into it and modify it.
That's like saying cars got worse because everyone settled on four wheels with rubber tyres.
| null |
1
|
1544128309
|
False
|
0
|
eb8lesy
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8i93j
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8lesy/
|
1547273455
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Gsonderling
|
t2_jww0y
|
In principle yes, but for more complicated tasks the definition of true becomes rather problematic. And that's even if you have data free of errors, which is relatively improbable, if humans were involved in collection.
For example, if you are training network to fill out tax forms. You need data on how to properly fill them, say records from reputable accounting firm. But if the employees of aforementioned company have habit of making few specific mistakes, your system will do them as well.
It can be minor, like mislabeling two interchangeable items, but it can be much worse.
The point is, humans can not be trusted. And if you train your model on tens of thousands of lines, you can't possibly check them yourself. So you need to be skeptical.
| null |
0
|
1545285502
|
False
|
0
|
ec5xwu3
|
t3_a7m6jc
| null | null |
t1_ec5u9q4
|
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec5xwu3/
|
1547836636
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1544128340
|
False
|
0
|
eb8lgl7
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb89jdc
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8lgl7/
|
1547273477
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ass-moe
|
t2_34nnj
|
Good analogy there! Will steal for future use.
| null |
0
|
1545285515
|
False
|
0
|
ec5xx8v
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5pi1a
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5xx8v/
|
1547836641
|
10
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ccfreak2k
|
t2_5cq7p
|
[Mozilla wasn't exactly happy about it.](https://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/2344972/mozilla-grudgingly-brings-netflix-to-linux-with-drm)
| null |
0
|
1544128363
|
False
|
0
|
eb8lhx6
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8k3ie
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8lhx6/
|
1547273494
|
29
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
instanced_banana
|
t2_240brbou
|
Also, would it could be for how a long time it took from Windows XP to Windows Vista which came with Internet Explorer 7?
| null |
0
|
1545285526
|
False
|
0
|
ec5xxkh
|
t3_a7k0an
| null | null |
t1_ec513lj
|
/r/programming/comments/a7k0an/did_google_cripple_edges_youtube_performance/ec5xxkh/
|
1547836645
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
dood1337
|
t2_h8e7n
|
Time to axe good ol' Bitbucket and Jira.
| null |
0
|
1544128513
|
False
|
0
|
eb8lqiw
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t3_a3kk7u
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8lqiw/
|
1547273599
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
instanced_banana
|
t2_240brbou
|
People rallied Project Spartan, it was until it was renamed to Edge and showed in the mainstream that it was hold by a lot of people like shit.
| null |
0
|
1545285639
|
False
|
0
|
ec5y173
|
t3_a7k0an
| null | null |
t1_ec49q72
|
/r/programming/comments/a7k0an/did_google_cripple_edges_youtube_performance/ec5y173/
|
1547836690
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
After_Dark
|
t2_67jra
|
You're right, I'll update to reflect this
| null |
0
|
1544128554
|
False
|
0
|
eb8lsrk
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8lhx6
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8lsrk/
|
1547273627
|
5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
HydroPhobeFireMan
|
t2_164qcq
|
wat?
| null |
0
|
1545285664
|
False
|
0
|
ec5y1xy
|
t3_a7pzxt
| null | null |
t1_ec5ihb0
|
/r/programming/comments/a7pzxt/can_javascript_override_a_nofollow_meta_tag/ec5y1xy/
|
1547836699
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
phySi0
|
t2_60d3z
|
> 95%+ of the time it's your bug. You should be very thorough before looking to blame other code.
Not necessarily.
If you're considering looking at the compiler source, then you're right (unless it's a side project language or something stupid); most any compiler you're using at work will be far less buggy than your own code.
When it comes to library code, though, then it definitely depends on the library. There're way more buggy popular libraries than there are buggy popular compilers.
| null |
0
|
1544128555
|
False
|
0
|
eb8lsty
|
t3_a3crqx
| null | null |
t1_eb5cxsi
|
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb8lsty/
|
1547273628
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Deltigre
|
t2_4aj7t
|
Biased data models. It's like teaching an ML model to recognize pictures of quadrilateral shapes, but all you feed it is squares.
https://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/the-risk-of-machine-learning-bias-and-how-to-prevent-it/
| null |
0
|
1545285665
|
False
|
0
|
ec5y1ym
|
t3_a7m6jc
| null | null |
t1_ec5u9q4
|
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec5y1ym/
|
1547836699
|
15
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1544128600
|
False
|
0
|
eb8lvac
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb8h70i
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8lvac/
|
1547273658
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1545285727
|
1545667572
|
0
|
ec5y3xe
|
t3_a7rit7
| null | null |
t1_ec5xi9a
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec5y3xe/
|
1547836724
|
11
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
gdrag14
|
t2_6nuog
|
Not quite. 1 revolution is 2π rad.
| null |
0
|
1544128625
|
False
|
0
|
eb8lwmg
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb89jdc
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8lwmg/
|
1547273675
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
1RedOne
|
t2_3u5hd
|
>I personally experienced a situation when a dedicated database was created to store extra 30GB of data. After converting the data from JSON to tables and using right types, the same exact data took a little bit more than 600MB, fit entirely in RAM even on smallest instances.
I would definitely read this medium post.
| null |
0
|
1545285886
|
False
|
0
|
ec5y8w4
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5dg2h
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5y8w4/
|
1547836813
|
13
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1544128629
|
False
|
0
|
eb8lwua
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7fwd0
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8lwua/
|
1547273677
|
-2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1545285913
|
False
|
0
|
ec5y9qr
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5p4wq
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5y9qr/
|
1547836824
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
AquaWolfGuy
|
t2_kerg1
|
> or they've already got a sweetheart deal in place with Australia to leave them the fuck alone
It won't really matter for them. Disclosure of these requests is illegal, so the public can't know whether they've gotten one or not anyway. The options are for us to risk it and hope there won't be any backdoors, for us to leave Atlassian, or for Atlassian to leave Australia.
| null |
0
|
1544128647
|
False
|
0
|
eb8lxwe
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7zrql
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8lxwe/
|
1547273691
|
14
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
instanced_banana
|
t2_240brbou
|
That's pretty cool, without delving on Github are there other accepted Mail providers?
| null |
0
|
1545285953
|
False
|
0
|
ec5yay7
|
t3_a7ubih
| null | null |
t3_a7ubih
|
/r/programming/comments/a7ubih/mailpromise_simple_email_service_for_nodejs_and/ec5yay7/
|
1547836839
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
apachechief
|
t2_3mx7y
|
Yeah that's great for business... ??? Microsoft has been making great moves towards OS community.
| null |
0
|
1544128691
|
False
|
0
|
eb8m0ag
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8hxma
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8m0ag/
|
1547273720
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
HarwellDekatron
|
t2_v6p5z5j
|
Hahah, it's not as bad as you'd think. I wish it had a native GUI instead of slow-ass-balls Electron, but hey... still reasonable value for the price :)
| null |
0
|
1545285982
|
False
|
0
|
ec5ybtk
|
t3_a7r8qv
| null | null |
t1_ec5w50v
|
/r/programming/comments/a7r8qv/eclipse_410_released/ec5ybtk/
|
1547836849
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ccfreak2k
|
t2_5cq7p
|
[It's getting there.](https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/commandline/2018/08/02/windows-command-line-introducing-the-windows-pseudo-console-conpty/)
| null |
0
|
1544128728
|
False
|
0
|
eb8m2dc
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8bj4f
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8m2dc/
|
1547273746
|
23
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
1RedOne
|
t2_3u5hd
|
Maybe I'm fuzzy here, why wouldn't the index persist through a restart?
| null |
0
|
1545286026
|
False
|
0
|
ec5yd7w
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5g3qa
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5yd7w/
|
1547836866
|
12
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Freyr90
|
t2_qy7vh
|
> Monopolies are bad in capitalism because they stifle competitors
Monopolies are bad everywhere because they lead to stagnation and suppression of the competitors. Chromium is already defining the web, which is not good. I'm a firefox user myself and it's appalling to see how more and more pages are unresponsive or even do not work in firefox, because they were tested of the default browser.
| null |
0
|
1544128766
|
False
|
0
|
eb8m4i6
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8j3vu
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8m4i6/
|
1547273772
|
13
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
wengchunkn
|
t2_teo9t
|
Markdown (TeX, formatting, style, readability) over Reverse Polish Notation (code).
[https://www.reddit.com/r/ProgrammingLanguages/comments/a7llui/what\_is\_not\_a\_stack\_machine/](https://www.reddit.com/r/ProgrammingLanguages/comments/a7llui/what_is_not_a_stack_machine/)
| null |
0
|
1545286206
|
False
|
0
|
ec5yiqm
|
t3_a7m6jc
| null | null |
t1_ec5xuc9
|
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec5yiqm/
|
1547836935
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
2infinite
|
t2_8txqs
|
They are so proud to have passed this bill, they don't understand what they've done.
Why would any international company hire an Australian company now?
| null |
0
|
1544128777
|
False
|
0
|
eb8m53i
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7l2y2
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8m53i/
|
1547273779
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
anothdae
|
t2_15wz2i
|
Yeah, I am so glad we didn't get the president that promised boots on the ground in syria.
| null |
0
|
1545286226
|
False
|
0
|
ec5yjby
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec5q9hp
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec5yjby/
|
1547836942
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Tweenk
|
t2_57w1x
|
Are you also wary that LLVM/Clang is basically the only viable C++ compiler?
Web standards are so complex that spreading the effort between Google and Microsoft makes perfect sense for everyone involved. There is a finite number of competent software engineers in the world, and instead of implementing the same thing twice they could do something more useful.
| null |
0
|
1544128829
|
False
|
0
|
eb8m7ze
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb85ucw
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8m7ze/
|
1547273815
|
-4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
kankyo
|
t2_77w4q
|
I was unclear: I mean this is an over engineered dependency injection system.
| null |
0
|
1545286354
|
False
|
0
|
ec5ynb3
|
t3_a7d9m9
| null | null |
t1_ec2q8bq
|
/r/programming/comments/a7d9m9/dependency_injection_in_python/ec5ynb3/
|
1547836995
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
BrokenHS
|
t2_csbsl
|
That’s not what radians are, though. Radians are based in the formula for the circumference of a circle: 2πr. With radians you can multiply the radius of the circle by the angle in radians to get the arc length, i.e. the portion of the circumference that angle covers.
| null |
0
|
1544128852
|
1544132839
|
0
|
eb8m98r
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb8lgl7
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8m98r/
|
1547273830
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Dockirby
|
t2_6ozpc
|
I prefer the term FOMO Tech.
| null |
0
|
1545286444
|
False
|
0
|
ec5yq2f
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec522a4
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5yq2f/
|
1547837029
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
1
|
1544128872
|
1544154552
|
0
|
eb8maf3
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8cqj7
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8maf3/
|
1547273845
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
idfk_idfk
|
t2_x020v
|
If the same data existed in normalized tables, the "column names" as described by OP would appear in the table definition only. Each record in the table would only contain the values that exist in those columns and not the column names, themselves.
OP is saying that using JSON requires the name of the column to be explicitly written in each JSON string—in other words—in each record. It's redundant, and what's worse, it's redundancy with strings, which are memory hogs.
Also, query results in an RBDMS or records in a table are humanly readable. As far as I know, presentation of the data in an RDBMS isn't any worse than in NO SQL. The win for using NO SQL is if your data is constantly changing in structure, or if there is little commonality between records structurally. It's designed for those use cases. If it's being used for anything outside of those use cases, it's going to have significant costs in both size and performance.
| null |
0
|
1545286532
|
1545314255
|
0
|
ec5yspy
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5x3m0
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5yspy/
|
1547837063
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
UncleMeat11
|
t2_15oor3
|
DRM has been in www for ages. It was just a nightmarish ad hoc pile of different solutions with security and correctness problems. The options weren't DRM or no DRM.
| null |
0
|
1544128877
|
False
|
0
|
eb8mao6
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8iijj
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8mao6/
|
1547273849
|
9
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
nidoran
|
t2_48o41
|
This is a kinda cool way of thinking about Observables and Promises. I dig it.
​
| null |
0
|
1545286742
|
False
|
0
|
ec5yz4m
|
t3_a7mo7v
| null | null |
t3_a7mo7v
|
/r/programming/comments/a7mo7v/javascript_gettersetter_pyramid/ec5yz4m/
|
1547837141
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
2infinite
|
t2_8txqs
|
Not just Liberals.
Labor voted for it. After being guilt tripped by the Liberals by saying if they don't vote for it they support terrorists.
| null |
0
|
1544128913
|
False
|
0
|
eb8mco1
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7d26a
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8mco1/
|
1547273873
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
kirbyfan64sos
|
t2_lzxoq
|
I have absolutely no clue what they meant by this, because its *definitely* not proprietary. Maybe the author just meant something more to the effect of "special"?
| null |
0
|
1545286754
|
False
|
0
|
ec5yzgl
|
t3_a7lho8
| null | null |
t1_ec4o3u4
|
/r/programming/comments/a7lho8/reasons_why_vuejs_is_getting_more_traction_every/ec5yzgl/
|
1547837145
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
iindigo
|
t2_8z3q9
|
It’s terrible for anybody who doesn’t want to use chrome. I can use Firefox or Safari today because even though a few sites already develop “chrome only”, most at least adhere to standards. The fewer competing engines exist, the less reason web devs have to follow real standards (instead of what works with chrome), increasingly forcing everybody to use chrome or chrome derivatives whether they like it or not.
| null |
0
|
1544128942
|
False
|
0
|
eb8meba
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8b77p
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8meba/
|
1547273893
|
22
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
BinaryRockStar
|
t2_49iwm
|
Do you really need the answer? [Price discrimination](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price_discrimination)- slightly more features at higher prices brackets mean more money for Microsoft overall. They'd be silly not to charge more for features that cost them a lot to develop.
Also note that not all users need all features. Home users wouldn't benefit from a lot of the domain and policy related features that come with Pro and Enterprise SKUs. If these features impact performance by running a service in the background, for example, then home users will have a worse experience.
As a poor analogy Linux distros come in all sorts of flavours and ones on the same base (Ubuntu, Ubuntu Server, Lubuntu, Xubuntu, etc.) differentiate largely on the applications and features bundled, which do impact performance.
| null |
0
|
1545286755
|
False
|
0
|
ec5yzhe
|
t3_a7hbku
| null | null |
t1_ec5tcbq
|
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec5yzhe/
|
1547837145
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Justmyaccount22
|
t2_13gthvrs
|
Microsoft doesn't own electron at all. Not sure where you're pulling that from.
| null |
0
|
1544128945
|
False
|
0
|
eb8meih
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8evgx
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8meih/
|
1547273895
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ivquatch
|
t2_3a6gu
|
Fuck Ruby.
JK. I just have ptsd from all the "Rubinistas" telling me how great Ruby was a few years back. Now, it seems the Python/JS kiddies have stolen the spotlight.
| null |
1
|
1545286790
|
False
|
0
|
ec5z0jo
|
t3_a7rit7
| null | null |
t1_ec5qvha
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec5z0jo/
|
1547837158
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
uptimefordays
|
t2_361cq5u
|
Sure, Apple is hardly a market share juggernaut. Sure Apple leads market share in select markets on the mobile front, but macOS is still a tiny minority. Apple makes tons of money and has a huge market cap but they're not anything like Google in terms of markets they own.
| null |
0
|
1544129007
|
False
|
0
|
eb8mhy3
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8hgo0
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8mhy3/
|
1547273938
|
-4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
CSI_Tech_Dept
|
t2_3pr1l
|
In worked for a company that uses PostgreSQL with JSONB type and stores data there.
It developed a sophisticated type system, which was of course enforced on the application level and everything was stored in JSON as string. All of these types could be replaced with either standard Postgres type, custom composite type (CREATE TYPE), a table and table inheritance for subtypes.
To be fair the database was first in MySQL where types are somewhat limited, but removing that would significantly simplify the code.
Not to mention, that for schema less database there were still migrations, called filters, where a script was going through every entry in the database and modified JSON.
| null |
0
|
1545286826
|
False
|
0
|
ec5z1le
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5psqc
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5z1le/
|
1547837172
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
stackered
|
t2_4em54
|
Legislators don't know anything except how to pass laws about things they know nothing about
| null |
0
|
1544129014
|
False
|
0
|
eb8miau
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7i8k3
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8miau/
|
1547273943
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ajeoae
|
t2_bbq75
|
As a DevOp you remind me of my shame :/
| null |
0
|
1545286829
|
False
|
0
|
ec5z1ps
|
t3_a7rdpt
| null | null |
t1_ec5nf2x
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rdpt/microsoft_unveils_windows_sandbox_run_any_app_in/ec5z1ps/
|
1547837173
|
16
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
JoJoModding
|
t2_fpfnr
|
We had RSA encryption in College a few weeks ago, in Math 101, Week 8. You can fit the entire procedure (plus proofs of why it works) in 2 pages.
I then implemented it and it was like 10-20 lines of code (minus the keygen part). You can print it onto a T-shirt and sell that.
It's also really simple and I guess a lot of people still roughly know how it works.
| null |
0
|
1544129052
|
False
|
0
|
eb8mkdn
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7yymm
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8mkdn/
|
1547273968
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1545286846
|
False
|
0
|
ec5z283
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5puym
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5z283/
|
1547837179
|
-7
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Caraes_Naur
|
t2_2i5ux
|
I said literally, not philosophically.
| null |
0
|
1544129135
|
False
|
0
|
eb8mowh
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8l18q
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8mowh/
|
1547274053
|
24
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
nirataro
|
t2_m09pc
|
> However, SQL does not arbitrarily scale
Most developers won't have this problem
| null |
0
|
1545286921
|
False
|
0
|
ec5z4h4
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5tx5f
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5z4h4/
|
1547837208
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
PiratesSayMoo
|
t2_1ceptnl3
|
I meant that the end result would be originalValue-1 or originalValue-2, not a value of -1 or -2. My point was that the mPoolsize-- is, by itself, enough to recreate this issue, because it is a non-atomic read+write. The article implies that the issue is because the if statement contains a read and the mPoolsize-- contains a write to the same variable, so they could be interleaved between two threads, but would be more clear that the timing of the if statement is not the only possible issue with the code.
​
If we were to number the reads and writes to the mPoolsize variable in those two lines of code:
"mPoolsize > 0" <--- 1 - Read
"mPoolsize--" <--- 2 - Read, 3 - Write
Given threads A and B, some of the orderings could be:
Best case: (would properly catch the decrease below 0 and set mPoolsize to the correct value)
1A
2A
3A
1B
2B (Doesn't happen if mPoolsize not > 0)
3B (Doesn't happen if mPoolsize not > 0)
The Illustrated case: (Has decrease below zero error, but mPoolsize is correctly set to 2 less than original mPoolsize)
1A
1B
2A
3A
2B (Happens even if mPoolsize no longer > 0)
3B (Happens even if mPoolsize no longer > 0)
The non-atomic decrement case: (Has decrease below zero error AND mPoolsize is not set to 2 less than the original)
1A
1B
2A (Reads original value of mPoolsize)
2B (Also reads original value of mPoolsize)
3A (Writes original mPoolsize - 1)
3B (Happens even if mPoolsize no longer > 0, also writes original mPoolsize - 1)
In the first case, if it starts with mPoolsize = 2, then it does the decrement twice, and it ends at mPoolsize =0.
If it starts with mPoolsize = 1, then it does the decrement once, and it ends at mPoolsize =0.
&#x200B;
In the second case, if it starts with mPoolsize = 2, then it does the decrement twice, and it ends at mPoolsize =0.
If it starts with mPoolsize = 1, then it does the decrement twice, and it ends at mPoolsize = -1.
&#x200B;
In the third case, if it starts with mPoolsize = 2, then it does the decrement twice, but it ends at mPoolsize = 1.
If it starts with mPoolsize = 1, then it does the decrement twice, and it ends at mPoolsize =0.
&#x200B;
Since mPoolsize-- is not atomic, sometimes the third case will happen when the buggy code from the article is run. That produces an even weirder result where mPoolsize doesn't go negative, but other things that should only have happened once are happening more than once, even though mPoolsize is only decrementing by one!
&#x200B;
| null |
0
|
1544129284
|
False
|
0
|
eb8mwx6
|
t3_a3crqx
| null | null |
t1_eb62fhh
|
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb8mwx6/
|
1547274152
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
midnitewarrior
|
t2_57vgu
|
How kind of them to update their product to make sure it won't lose your updates now.
The fact that's even a thing is very telling of the nature of fadware and its evangelists.
| null |
0
|
1545287014
|
False
|
0
|
ec5z77w
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5h010
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5z77w/
|
1547837242
|
16
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
lanzaio
|
t2_zlgp0
|
Find a new job.
| null |
0
|
1544129417
|
False
|
0
|
eb8n3y3
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8gd6h
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8n3y3/
|
1547274239
|
21
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
dfritsch86
|
t2_4ndli
|
Completely agree. It is not like newspaper articles are unstructured. They have a rather uniform schema that perfectly fits into a relational database.
| null |
0
|
1545287035
|
False
|
0
|
ec5z7ta
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5xbz4
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5z7ta/
|
1547837249
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
MommySmellsYourCum
|
t2_2etq91wj
|
I'm in firmware, but I don't see what my comment has to do with IE
| null |
0
|
1544129524
|
False
|
0
|
eb8n9je
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb89t4z
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8n9je/
|
1547274308
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
BinaryRockStar
|
t2_49iwm
|
Interesting, I've only worked passingly with Oracle and was under the impression it at least had a read-replica sort of load balancing solution built in.
| null |
0
|
1545287055
|
False
|
0
|
ec5z8h6
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec56wz8
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5z8h6/
|
1547837257
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
zippy72
|
t2_blip5
|
It’s gonna be painful. Would you trust any Aussie open source after this? I wouldn’t.
| null |
0
|
1544129544
|
False
|
0
|
eb8nam6
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb88gfd
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8nam6/
|
1547274321
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
BinaryRockStar
|
t2_49iwm
|
What do you mean by interface? Don't your applications use a layer like JDBC to abstract away the database type?
| null |
0
|
1545287099
|
False
|
0
|
ec5z9q1
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5spo1
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5z9q1/
|
1547837273
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Kirito9704
|
t2_hqi6j
|
The Chromium browser, and by design the engine running it, [is actually a pretty big open-source project](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/). Plus, with Edge being reduced to nothing more than a free PDF reader for me at this point, I kind of want to see what Microsoft can do with it that would make me actually want to use Edge.
| null |
1
|
1544129589
|
False
|
0
|
eb8nd21
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8hsol
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8nd21/
|
1547274351
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
glacialthinker
|
t2_77yrw
|
Empirical counterpoint to your hypothesis: As a game developer I hate C++. However, I'll bet a lot of profs, and programmers in general, don't know many languages -- in which case the "one they use" might be the only one they know enough to be a favorite.
| null |
0
|
1545287114
|
False
|
0
|
ec5za62
|
t3_a7rit7
| null | null |
t1_ec5y3xe
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec5za62/
|
1547837278
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
-____-____-____
|
t2_1ayx22ok
|
Stop bending the knee to socialist/authoritarian bureaucrats and have a little self respect
| null |
0
|
1544129657
|
False
|
0
|
eb8ngru
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb8lwua
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8ngru/
|
1547274397
|
-3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ForeverAlot
|
t2_4yj7p
|
MySQL is famously riddled with odd or decidedly wrong implementation choices. You need not spend much time on the Internet to learn about its many deficiencies; [here is one arbitrary example](https://grimoire.ca/mysql/choose-something-else)^1. All RDBMSs have their idiosyncrasies but MySQL has more than most and and many are of the "surprise!" variety.
^(1 Take this article with a grain of salt. I see it references the famous PHP fractal article which is an absolute hack job.)
| null |
0
|
1545287156
|
False
|
0
|
ec5zbf8
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5po93
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5zbf8/
|
1547837294
|
7
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Fisher9001
|
t2_a7ja8
|
> A lot. We're basically entering a second IE6 era.
You either don't actually remember these times or you are just big exaggerator.
| null |
0
|
1544129659
|
False
|
0
|
eb8ngu3
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb86dsl
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8ngu3/
|
1547274397
|
7
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
c3534l
|
t2_erav1
|
/r/programming is what /r/technology should be, but it's really up to the mods at this point.
| null |
0
|
1545287246
|
False
|
0
|
ec5ze20
|
t3_a7rdpt
| null | null |
t1_ec5nf2x
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rdpt/microsoft_unveils_windows_sandbox_run_any_app_in/ec5ze20/
|
1547837326
|
9
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
neuk_mijn_oogkas
|
t2_2032avqr
|
> Bjarne says that there are only two kinds of languages, those nobody uses and those people complain about.
I would say that too if I had created a super popular yet compeltely maldesigned language.
C is just as popular as C++ and doesn't get _half_ the flack C++ gets and that's quite remarkable because it's really badly designed; same for Python.
Whilst it's obviously true that languages no one heard about don't get a massive amount of flack it's quite common that popular languages don't get it. Rust and Go are about as popular as one another yet Rust is routinely praised and Go gets all the flack; might have something to do with that Rust legitimtely popularizes and invents new good ideas that hitherto had no mainstream application and is a language people actually thought about and that Go is bad design decision atop bad design decision that's just heavily pushed by Google.
| null |
0
|
1544129699
|
False
|
0
|
eb8nj1v
|
t3_a3ps00
| null | null |
t1_eb89po6
|
/r/programming/comments/a3ps00/rust_2018_is_here_but_what_is_it/eb8nj1v/
|
1547274425
|
16
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
MrDOS
|
t2_43dri
|
That was literally his point: you need to understand what Spring is doing under the hood of Spring Boot. You can't just use Spring Boot without understanding how Spring sees the problem, because you need to know how the annotations relate to what would have been XML. Spring Boot is the leakiest abstraction I've ever seen.
| null |
0
|
1545287247
|
False
|
0
|
ec5ze28
|
t3_a7nggt
| null | null |
t1_ec5tvrw
|
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec5ze28/
|
1547837326
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
After_Dark
|
t2_67jra
|
There's also the big differentiator that in the past the dominant browser was usually controller by at best a company that was ambivalent about the quality of the web and at worst a company that saw the web as a competitor to their main source of profit.
Now the main force behind the dominant browser is a company that makes websites. So long as Google doesn't take a sharp turn and start making features that only they can use, we can expect to keep seeing improvements to browsers and ones that all websites can make use of and which are easy for other non-chrome browsers to implement
| null |
0
|
1544129700
|
False
|
0
|
eb8nj2k
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8b8ox
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8nj2k/
|
1547274425
|
17
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
derpwolf1
|
t2_8zfjn
|
Awesome!
| null |
1
|
1545287317
|
False
|
0
|
ec5zfzt
|
t3_a7rdpt
| null | null |
t1_ec5mugu
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rdpt/microsoft_unveils_windows_sandbox_run_any_app_in/ec5zfzt/
|
1547837351
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
zippy72
|
t2_blip5
|
Check out “move my business to Ireland”, you’ll find a dozen relocation companies chasing Brexit business. I suspect they might be able to help...
| null |
0
|
1544129752
|
False
|
0
|
eb8nm1k
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7r4bv
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8nm1k/
|
1547274462
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1545287328
|
1545667556
|
0
|
ec5zgam
|
t3_a7rit7
| null | null |
t1_ec5za62
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec5zgam/
|
1547837354
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ahoy_butternuts
|
t2_8j4l9
|
Lmfao! Socialism is when the government does stuff, amirite?
| null |
0
|
1544129766
|
False
|
0
|
eb8nmub
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb8ngru
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8nmub/
|
1547274472
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[removed]
| null |
0
|
1545287352
|
False
|
0
|
ec5zgyq
|
t3_a7v64s
| null | null |
t3_a7v64s
|
/r/programming/comments/a7v64s/global_quality_lifecycle_management_software/ec5zgyq/
|
1547837362
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
Subsets and Splits
Filtered Reddit Uplifting News
The query retrieves specific news articles by their link IDs, providing a basic overview of those particular entries without deeper analysis or insights.
Recent Programming Comments
Returns a limited set of programming records from 2020 to 2023, providing basic filtering with minimal analytical value.