archived
stringclasses
2 values
author
stringlengths
3
20
author_fullname
stringlengths
4
12
body
stringlengths
0
22.5k
comment_type
stringclasses
1 value
controversiality
stringclasses
2 values
created_utc
stringlengths
10
10
edited
stringlengths
4
12
gilded
stringclasses
7 values
id
stringlengths
1
7
link_id
stringlengths
7
10
locked
stringclasses
2 values
name
stringlengths
4
10
parent_id
stringlengths
5
10
permalink
stringlengths
41
91
retrieved_on
stringlengths
10
10
score
stringlengths
1
4
subreddit_id
stringclasses
1 value
subreddit_name_prefixed
stringclasses
1 value
subreddit_type
stringclasses
1 value
total_awards_received
stringclasses
19 values
False
NoInkling
t2_csqao
As good a time as any to try out Gitlab I guess.
null
0
1544133858
False
0
eb8u3jx
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb86zvv
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8u3jx/
1547277809
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
doublehyphen
t2_9v5mu
That does not match my experience. In the Ruby and the Rust ecosystems there is more mature support for PostgreSQL. For example the in my opinion best ORM for Ruby, Sequel, seems to target PostgreSQL first. And PHP used to have better support for PostgreSQL than for MySQL, but it was a long time since I last used PHP. But outside of that PostgreSQL has many more features, better documentation, and fewer surprising caveats.
null
0
1545295074
False
0
ec6542m
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec5mprv
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec6542m/
1547840016
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
DEFY_member
t2_46l9l
Gravity is just a theory...
null
0
1544133888
False
0
eb8u5bh
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb7xfud
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8u5bh/
1547277831
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
ForeverAlot
t2_4yj7p
Sounds a bit like a [navigational database](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navigational_database) / [network model](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_model), and the timeline seems to fit.
null
0
1545295335
False
0
ec65ayg
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec61wkk
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec65ayg/
1547840100
6
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Aardvark_Man
t2_daw0y
Which means it's a defunct law, because any backdoor creates a massive vulnerability. I'm really disappointed with my government over this, and especially the opposition for not opposing a clearly terrible law.
null
0
1544133921
False
0
eb8u7a6
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb7htkm
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8u7a6/
1547277855
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
RaptorXP
t2_e0lgi
That was a rhetorical question.
null
0
1545295361
False
0
ec65bpb
t3_a7hbku
null
null
t1_ec4ypnv
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec65bpb/
1547840110
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Aardvark_Man
t2_daw0y
In his defence, Trumble is gone now, it's other even worse bastards running things.
null
0
1544134032
False
0
eb8udrm
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb7tjc1
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8udrm/
1547277935
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
18793425978235
t2_2tnbnv4q
They do. I think what they might be suggesting is that you should plan when new indexes are applied to the database, instead of just letting it automatically happen at startup.
null
0
1545295416
False
0
ec65d45
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec5yd7w
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec65d45/
1547840128
9
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Hauleth
t2_7aea6
If you just need to allow configuration to be done in the application and to not be edited by human, then as well you can use SQLite, which I believe will be much better structured than any other format. And then you do not need to worry about indentation or any other “user experience” features that OP mentions in the article.
null
0
1544134052
False
0
eb8uf06
t3_a3q7y5
null
null
t1_eb8u0ok
/r/programming/comments/a3q7y5/what_is_wrong_with_toml/eb8uf06/
1547277950
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
MotorAdhesive4
t2_232uur2d
Wars have started and ended in under a decade.
null
0
1545295582
False
0
ec65hfr
t3_a7nggt
null
null
t1_ec5m8k3
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec65hfr/
1547840198
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
[deleted]
null
0
1544134064
False
0
eb8ufo7
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb8t0xm
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8ufo7/
1547277959
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
LimEJET
t2_4zfyw
You're describing compilation from a verbose, documenting system (TeX) to an intermediate, minimal target (5GL) for running on a slew of architectures. Congratulations, you've invented the JVM.
null
0
1545295693
False
0
ec65kdf
t3_a7m6jc
null
null
t1_ec5yiqm
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec65kdf/
1547840234
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
shevegen
t2_atqp
While the first part is partially true - the second is wrong, since it IS related indirectly by using it.
null
0
1544134135
False
0
eb8uju6
t3_a3pzi4
null
null
t1_eb86p7v
/r/programming/comments/a3pzi4/systemd_unprivileged_users_with_uid_int_max_can/eb8uju6/
1547278010
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
MotorAdhesive4
t2_232uur2d
>The analogy of pointing out the memory usage of a Hello World app is because it gives you an idea of framework overhead before implementing any application code. The analogy of "I need 500mb memory for writing hello world" is the same analogy of saying "I paid 20000$ for a car and only drove to the store once, so the trip cost me 20000$". You're not paying for driving to the store, you're paying to be ready to drive everywhere you want that's limited only by your gas tank size, gas station location and natural barriers.
null
0
1545295695
1545296802
0
ec65kfa
t3_a7nggt
null
null
t1_ec5vurt
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec65kfa/
1547840234
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
YaBoyMax
t2_tnu7t
>...We also expect this work to enable us to bring Microsoft Edge to other platforms like macOS. >...A few near-term examples will include continued work on ARM64 support... This is really exciting. Like everyone else, I'm dubious of what amounts to a partial merger between Edge and Chrome, but bringing another option to non-Windows platforms is always a good thing. I just hope that a Linux build is somewhere on the roadmap too.
null
0
1544134158
False
0
eb8ul8x
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t3_a3q1vh
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8ul8x/
1547278028
6
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
sdhillon
t2_3jy20
How did the survey convert answers to productivity loss?
null
0
1545295825
False
0
ec65nw9
t3_a7vq79
null
null
t3_a7vq79
/r/programming/comments/a7vq79/programmers_need_good_lifestyle/ec65nw9/
1547840277
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
shevegen
t2_atqp
This is technically correct - but as systemd uses polkit, it is affected as well. Put differently, if you drive a car, you will need to have good tires in order to drive even if you could detach the tires at any moment in time.
null
0
1544134182
False
0
eb8umoz
t3_a3pzi4
null
null
t1_eb86p6d
/r/programming/comments/a3pzi4/systemd_unprivileged_users_with_uid_int_max_can/eb8umoz/
1547278045
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
peterwilli
t2_dwi1a
Agreed, if you have to move to Postgres from Mongo at a later stage of production then you've picked the wrong database to begin with.
null
0
1545295900
False
0
ec65po9
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec5d76j
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec65po9/
1547840300
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
GaianNeuron
t2_8njru
Nowhere that's better, but at least somewhere that's no longer worse. 🇺🇸
null
0
1544134277
False
0
eb8usk6
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb8sdvw
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8usk6/
1547278118
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
billy_tables
t2_9qk2v
MongoDB doesn’t actually store JSON in disk though, it’s just represented over the wire that way. It stores BSON (a binary format), and the storage engine has compression built in, so duplicate data/field names never actually hits the disk
null
0
1545295907
False
0
ec65pu8
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec5plxk
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec65pu8/
1547840302
19
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Aardvark_Man
t2_daw0y
Basically, it passed because the government is holding a bare minimum of sitting days before the next election, so the parties didn't have time to debate and put in amendments. Then they dressed it up as "stopping terrorists and pedos," meaning if it wasn't passed and something goes tits up they'd blame the opposition. Currently the opposition is walking into government middle of next year, so they don't want anything that'll fuck em up. It's shady as fuck, and spineless, while fucking us over.
null
0
1544134299
False
0
eb8utxv
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb7ge6q
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8utxv/
1547278135
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
InaneB0b
t2_23tsdom8
correct
null
0
1545296063
False
0
ec65tiz
t3_a7m6jc
null
null
t1_ec61tm0
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec65tiz/
1547840348
-7
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
ApatheticBeardo
t2_h4ojp3s
Why not rewrite Chromium in Rust instead?
null
0
1544134303
False
0
eb8uu5d
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t3_a3q1vh
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8uu5d/
1547278137
18
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
[deleted]
null
0
1545296074
False
0
ec65trw
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec3uq5c
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec65trw/
1547840350
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Hook3d
t2_5ok4w
> Do you think that a seed from/dev/urandom is deterministic? Congrats on breaking pretty much every cryptographic key. Look asshole, why don't you understand the very basic elements of what you are talking about? urandom is pseudorandom, fucknuts. Just because there's some environmental noise doesn't mean that noise itself isn't deterministic. God you suck. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki//dev/random >In Unix-like operating systems, /dev/random, /dev/urandom and /dev/arandom are special files that serve as pseudorandom number generators.
null
0
1544134305
False
0
eb8uu9k
t3_a3crqx
null
null
t1_eb8gthm
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb8uu9k/
1547278139
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
wengchunkn
t2_teo9t
Not true. If you spend some time writing Forth type reverse Polish notation, then you will see you can add formatting markers to make the code more readable. This cannot be done to other programming languages because their syntax are rigid. JVM is just a stack machine. Go ask the inventor of JVM or vm of any other programming language that if they have not stolen ideas from Forth? In my article, I am proposing a Stack Machine Opcode Interchange (SMOPINT) mechanism, where opcode from one programming language (e.g. PHP) can be executed in the VM of another programming language (e.g. Java). Stack Machine has to be the most underexposed universal solution to lots of programming problems that most people are not aware of.
null
0
1545296107
False
0
ec65ujm
t3_a7m6jc
null
null
t1_ec65kdf
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec65ujm/
1547840360
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
cyberknight77
t2_evm0u
Well, Safari and Firefox are *the* two major browsers apart from Chrome.
null
0
1544134314
False
0
eb8uuus
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t1_eb85ucw
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8uuus/
1547278146
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
billy_tables
t2_9qk2v
In an RDBMS you deserialise everything, so you write once and reassemble it via JOINs on every read In document stores (all, not just mongo), your data model is structured how you want it to be on read, but you might have to make multiple updates if the data is denormalized across lots of places It boils down to a choice of write once and have the db work to assemble results every time on every read, (trivial updates, more complex queries); or, put in the effort to write a few times on an update, but your fetch queries just fetch a document and don’t change the structure - more complex updates, trivial queries. There is no right or wrong - it really depends on your app. It sounds like the graun are doing the same document store thing with PG they were doing with mongo, which IMO shows there’s nothing wrong with the document model
null
0
1545296258
False
0
ec65xzy
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec5zw1p
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec65xzy/
1547840416
12
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
2bdb2
t2_2u3fjz6
>What are you talking about? Much of the point is that you form a CRDT for your event log and don't need any kind of transaction isolation, much less serializable. Have you ever used CRDTs, or did you just find that on Wikipedia and decide it sounded cool? Because if you'd used CRDTs you'd know they aren't a general purpose solution and bave significant limitations. Not all data models can form a CRDT. They are very powerful tools, but also still don't magically solve the CAP theorem and at best still only give you eventual consistency. Why would I build an application with such significant limitations when I don't need it?
null
0
1544134333
1544135353
0
eb8uvzu
t3_a3dobm
null
null
t1_eb7nr1r
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb8uvzu/
1547278160
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
billy_tables
t2_9qk2v
The article said they didn’t change the schema though, they used the JSON column store in Postgres to achieve what they’re doing now
null
0
1545296357
False
0
ec660bi
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec52s17
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec660bi/
1547840445
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
nuclearpidgeon
t2_5zkvn
[Chromium Embedded Framework](https://bitbucket.org/chromiumembedded/cef) sounds very similar to what you are asking about. I believe Spotify use it for the UI in their desktop apps.
null
0
1544134371
False
0
eb8uy9y
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t1_eb85l21
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8uy9y/
1547278218
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
1Crazyman1
t2_8c98p
This gets repeated every time and is plain wrong. If you barely know anything about Resharper and know the bare minimum functionality, then this is true. But if you're a Resharper veteran, you know there is a lot of functionality missing from Vanilla Visual Studio. Even with plugins your struggle to find a replacement for all of it.
null
0
1545296363
False
0
ec660gx
t3_a7mgov
null
null
t1_ec4u6gm
/r/programming/comments/a7mgov/resharper_ultimate_20183_is_here_performance_vs/ec660gx/
1547840447
6
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Dude_What__
t2_2dhb3999
Never heard of atlassian. The heck is it ?
null
0
1544134404
False
0
eb8v0bc
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb7s5cr
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8v0bc/
1547278243
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
LimEJET
t2_4zfyw
How is what you're describing not intermediate compilation?
null
0
1545296385
False
0
ec660yh
t3_a7m6jc
null
null
t1_ec65ujm
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec660yh/
1547840453
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
DjRapitops
t2_n7m59
It's also called a canary release. Standard business in most big companies
null
0
1544134416
False
0
eb8v10v
t3_a3pkl3
null
null
t3_a3pkl3
/r/programming/comments/a3pkl3/release_in_the_shadows/eb8v10v/
1547278252
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
beertown
t2_l07ng
>“I don’t want to spend time thinking about how to structure my data” I heard that, and to me this is a plain stupid and lazy way to do the job of the software developer. Well designed data structures (at every level: database, C structs, class attributes, input parameters to functions/methods and their return values - these are also data structures) are solid rails towards a properly built software. Unexperienced programmers tend to think that a wonderfully and idiomatically written for-loop is the most important thing - but it's not. ​
null
0
1545296404
False
0
ec661dn
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec5ptu8
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec661dn/
1547840457
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Aardvark_Man
t2_daw0y
We're talking about a nation where one party wanted to put on an internet filter, and on the list of websites they had to block they included a session ID and the loopback address. They **are** clueless.
null
0
1544134433
False
0
eb8v23f
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb7jowl
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8v23f/
1547278266
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
3rr0r4oh4notfound
t2_2tdsek3t
Sad bit true
null
0
1545296449
False
0
ec662fa
t3_a7lsoz
null
null
t3_a7lsoz
/r/programming/comments/a7lsoz/when_my_girlfriend_asks_me_what_programming_is/ec662fa/
1547840470
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
sorlafloat
t2_2q1c255k
Sorry for image quality. https://imgur.com/9ORXiuM This is XCOM 2. The design is like this as it supports being extended by designers (non-programmers) and modders (players having a hack on it). There are several sections within each file, so it's deeper than it looks despite being artifically flattened. But yea you wouldn't put all those sections into a single file unless you were bonkers.
null
0
1544134438
False
0
eb8v2er
t3_a3q7y5
null
null
t1_eb8u32j
/r/programming/comments/a3q7y5/what_is_wrong_with_toml/eb8v2er/
1547278269
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
18793425978235
t2_2tnbnv4q
There is no reason why you can't use mongo for storing relational data. Pretty much all data relates to other data. What were the specifics of the query that made it so slow in mongo? All you mentioned is 3 seperate queries, but that doesn't really say anything.
null
1
1545296519
False
0
ec6642h
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec5a6l9
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec6642h/
1547840491
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
[deleted]
null
0
1544134530
False
0
eb8v825
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t1_eb8uu5d
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8v825/
1547278339
16
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
rickdg
t2_4gieq
Instructions unclear, still using mysql.
null
0
1545296536
False
0
ec664jj
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec50wqk
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec664jj/
1547840496
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
deadcow5
t2_96bew
I thought it was Ancestry at first, and I was very surprised to read a well-written article on a cleanly designed page until I noticed my mistake. (If you've ever used Ancestry.com, it looks like a bunch of visually impaired high schoolers coded it in their free time).
null
0
1544134536
False
0
eb8v8f9
t3_a3dobm
null
null
t1_eb5ilf3
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb8v8f9/
1547278344
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
billy_tables
t2_9qk2v
Those Jepsen tests are pretty good considering the first one, and knowing causal consistency was brand new around that time. I’d love to see Jepsen results for Postgres. At least mongo are paying for it
null
0
1545296550
False
0
ec664us
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec589p0
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec664us/
1547840501
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
john_brown_adk
t2_2b0pixz5
/r/StallmanWasRight
null
0
1544134571
False
0
eb8vahk
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t1_eb85ucw
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8vahk/
1547278369
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
swordglowsblue
t2_2nrkh5d0
And honestly, it's one of the fastest Electron apps I've ever seen. To be fair that's not saying much, but at least on my PC it boots in less than 5 seconds and runs beautifully once it's up. Having a ton of extensions will probably gunk up the works, though.
null
0
1545296561
False
0
ec6655g
t3_a7r8qv
null
null
t1_ec5ybtk
/r/programming/comments/a7r8qv/eclipse_410_released/ec6655g/
1547840504
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
[deleted]
null
0
1544134636
False
0
eb8vegb
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t3_a3q1vh
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8vegb/
1547278418
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
[deleted]
null
0
1545296624
False
0
ec666ru
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec58qfw
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec666ru/
1547840525
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
[deleted]
null
0
1544134763
False
0
eb8vmcn
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t1_eb8kk04
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8vmcn/
1547278516
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Petrosidius
t2_w8xyw
Python due to Matlab??
null
0
1545296671
False
0
ec667xs
t3_a7rit7
null
null
t1_ec5958t
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec667xs/
1547840540
7
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
jplevene
t2_a7c44
One huge cockup that Microsoft have always done is determined from the norm so that everybody uses their technology instead of others. Remember MSHTML over HTML5, IE had 99% of the market, now they have 20%. Same with Silverlight and loads more. Sticking with the leading engine might actually help them achieve a good and popular product, however they'll probably find a way to screw it up trying to get a monopoly again.
null
1
1544134795
False
0
eb8voh0
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t1_eb87n26
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8voh0/
1547278541
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
wengchunkn
t2_teo9t
I am not trying to reinvent the wheel. I am preparing lots of code modules where ordinary programmers can dive into the deep end of stack machine programming, now reserved for a few elite VM developers. We are talking about N * (N-1) programming language mapping here. Please try run my code, or let me look at your projects, so that I can understand your perspectives better.
null
0
1545296725
False
0
ec669ea
t3_a7m6jc
null
null
t1_ec660yh
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec669ea/
1547840559
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
[deleted]
null
0
1544134811
1545668616
0
eb8vphl
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t1_eb8kk04
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8vphl/
1547278554
7
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
jacmoe
t2_3hzym
Er, nope. \*embarrassed\* PyLab/SciPy, of course. Edit : in combination with [Matplotlib](https://matplotlib.org/) ​ Thanks for catching that ;p
null
0
1545296840
1545307391
0
ec66cd3
t3_a7rit7
null
null
t1_ec667xs
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec66cd3/
1547840595
5
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Trance2000
t2_1ibs7mq
Russia and China are loving this
null
0
1544134900
False
0
eb8vvae
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t3_a3kk7u
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8vvae/
1547278626
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
IshKebab
t2_htaqb
It's because XML was the hot new thing around the same time as Java, there weren't obviously better alternatives like there are now, and because they were both marketed for "enterprise" applications (and they still are really).
null
0
1545296853
False
0
ec66coe
t3_a7nggt
null
null
t1_ec5howf
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec66coe/
1547840598
10
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
NDaveT
t2_blt6b
Maybe that's what happened to Harold Holt.
null
0
1544134907
False
0
eb8vvqf
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb7xj7v
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8vvqf/
1547278631
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
shabunc
t2_af41a
I think Postgres is an excellent piece of software. Some of things said in the article give a hint though that IT team don't have enough expertise and there's non-zero probability they can ruin the Postgres-using experience as well.
null
0
1545296975
False
0
ec66fmu
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t3_a7q1bi
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec66fmu/
1547840635
6
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
[deleted]
null
0
1544134964
False
0
eb8vzeu
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t1_eb85ucw
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8vzeu/
1547278677
-2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
qkthrv17
t2_nk8o9
Not trying to be a douche but you should be able to find whatever you're looking for in your average search engine. You can limit searches to newer results, forcefully include words in the query, excluding words from it... I used spring last year and I simply put `-xml -boot` in google queries and limited results to last 2-3 years and... that's pretty much it to get accurate results. You probably lose some stuff if you exclude words but you can change the query if you don't find what you need with the first try.
null
0
1545297013
False
0
ec66gi9
t3_a7nggt
null
null
t1_ec5n4jv
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec66gi9/
1547840646
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
maratango
t2_19gxgval
Been wanting to try GuixSD for a while. A couple questions for anyone who uses it: - Is it feasible to use it without using/knowing Emacs? - Is the Guix interface better than Nix/NixOS? The problems I have with NixOS boil down to the interface being bad (it's hard to do common actions), and nix itself being kind of slow (search/install hits the full package cache on disk)
null
0
1544134997
False
0
eb8w1i6
t3_a3smnl
null
null
t3_a3smnl
/r/programming/comments/a3smnl/gnu_guix_and_guixsd_0160_released/eb8w1i6/
1547278702
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
poloppoyop
t2_9a5a3
> they are "the second best database for everything" Worst case scenario you can start using a [foreign data wrapper](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/postgres-fdw.html) around your "best database for this one usecase".
null
0
1545297058
False
0
ec66hii
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec5360t
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec66hii/
1547840658
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
AtmosphericMusk
t2_d3r49
I wonder if in the future hackers will successfully use precision radiation to hack peoples electrical devices.
null
0
1544135029
False
0
eb8w3el
t3_a3crqx
null
null
t1_eb7rglw
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb8w3el/
1547278726
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
agumonkey
t2_62nu4
Yeah that was my reaction when seeing the news. I thought it was stacking dust and bone remains of plugin developers
null
0
1545297085
False
0
ec66i6a
t3_a7r8qv
null
null
t1_ec5wqsc
/r/programming/comments/a7r8qv/eclipse_410_released/ec66i6a/
1547840666
-1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
stack-compression
t2_1w1eet1b
> If they decided some Russian they know is using my software committed or is committing a "major crime" they could order me to let them in? They could also order you to let them in if they believed someone using your software was breaking russian law. Or chinese law. Or north korean law. It's that broad.
null
0
1544135044
False
0
eb8w4cv
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb7gphh
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8w4cv/
1547278737
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Pleb_nz
t2_i3a02
I know this is anecdotal and the source may not be the best example of spring, but I’ve just been given a spring project to take on, just a simple set of APIs, and I was blown away with its size and verbosity. I could do the same thing in .net core with essentially half the lines of code.
null
0
1545297222
False
0
ec66l50
t3_a7nggt
null
null
t3_a7nggt
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec66l50/
1547840703
9
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Jalfor
t2_7bf8e
https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Bills_Legislation/Bills_Search_Results/Result?bId=r6195
null
0
1544135065
False
0
eb8w5kn
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb7vnsv
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8w5kn/
1547278753
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
LimEJET
t2_4zfyw
I'm trying to understand what it's doing different to any other intermediate bytecode. I'm pretty sure llvm is all rpn, for example, and code compiled for llvm can be decompiled into any other llvm-compatible language. Pretty sure that the same is true for jvm.
null
0
1545297270
False
0
ec66m8h
t3_a7m6jc
null
null
t1_ec669ea
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec66m8h/
1547840716
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Canadian_Infidel
t2_39fir
Wow that would be a fun situation to find yourself in.
null
0
1544135072
False
0
eb8w5zr
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t3_a3kk7u
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8w5zr/
1547278758
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Ice-Wreck
t2_xtsoa
Along with arstechnica.
null
0
1545297282
False
0
ec66miq
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec4z2se
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec66miq/
1547840720
6
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
davidchristiansen
t2_axv0h
Here's one way to do those three things in Pie: #lang pie (claim + (→ Nat Nat Nat)) (define + (λ (n k) (iter-Nat n k (λ (n-1) (add1 n-1))))) (claim * (→ Nat Nat Nat)) (define * (λ (n k) (iter-Nat n 0 (+ k)))) (claim Divides (→ Nat Nat U)) (define Divides (λ (n k) (Σ ((j Nat)) (= Nat (* n j) k)))) (claim Prime (→ Nat U)) (define Prime (λ (n) (Pair (→ (Either (= Nat 0 n) (= Nat 1 n)) Absurd) (Π ((k Nat)) (→ (Divides k n) (Either (= Nat k 1) (= Nat k n))))))) (claim Positive (→ Nat U)) (define Positive (λ (n) (→ (= Nat n 0) Absurd))) (claim Primes-Are-Positive (Π ((n Nat)) (→ (Prime n) (Positive n)))) (define Primes-Are-Positive (λ (n n-is-prime) (λ (n=0) ((car n-is-prime) (left (symm n=0))))))
null
0
1544135176
False
0
eb8wc9i
t3_a2s08c
null
null
t1_eb2i9m8
/r/programming/comments/a2s08c/the_little_typer_lets_learn_about_dependent_types/eb8wc9i/
1547278866
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
ants_a
t2_4955b
There are 2 kinds of applications - the ones that need relational queries and those that will need relational queries at some point in the future.
null
0
1545297431
False
0
ec66pws
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec5a6l9
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec66pws/
1547840762
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Matthew94
t2_6jzsd
> How is the rewrite-everything-in-rust going? I love you.
null
0
1544135222
False
0
eb8wf6z
t3_a3ps00
null
null
t1_eb82txx
/r/programming/comments/a3ps00/rust_2018_is_here_but_what_is_it/eb8wf6z/
1547278902
-12
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
soupersauce
t2_3ngv8
A spreadsheet.
null
0
1545297478
False
0
ec66r0u
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec61wkk
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec66r0u/
1547840775
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
NDaveT
t2_blt6b
Or they could move the whole company, and the jobs that go with it. Make a big public announcement as to why.
null
0
1544135253
False
0
eb8wh5p
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb7o8yr
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8wh5p/
1547278927
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
KikiShell
t2_12bh8t
Spring is still quite slow, a blog post comparing one version of spring with another doesn't change that. Spring has yet to reach the top 10 at the techempower benchmarks. If you are a big corp with big teams spring can be nice, because it has a very standardized way of doing things, so it is less likely that someone less experienced will fuck up. However if you actually value performance and know what you are doing, I wouldn't use it and use something more lightweight like vert.x instead, where the reactive programming patterns that spring only started to pay attention to recently are first class citizens.
null
0
1545297689
False
0
ec66vyc
t3_a7nggt
null
null
t1_ec5dzp8
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec66vyc/
1547840838
17
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
-____-____-____
t2_1ayx22ok
Socialist policy leads to more government control over more private industries. After years of such policy I'm not surprised this shit happened in AU. I wouldn't be shocked if the same shit happens in the UK soon if the Australians accept this and don't do something about it.
null
0
1544135298
1544208637
0
eb8wjx6
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb8nmub
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8wjx6/
1547278960
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
ipv6-dns
t2_1t534du4
there is a very big difference between Google backdoor and Russian intelligence services backdoors. The question here is what do you need: backdoor or a bot API. If you are living in NATO country then it's very strange to support Russian special services, their spyware, etc. As well as Chinese one. Because, "Google... backdoor... blah-blah". If "Push notification API" = backdoor then we should deny Web sockets, AJAX, etc, because they look like backdoors too :) The question here is not does something "looks" like backdoor, but whose backdoor is this.. Btw, you can see how Russians promote their telegram and downvote me.
null
0
1545297721
False
0
ec66wpe
t3_a79md4
null
null
t1_ec3fx05
/r/programming/comments/a79md4/building_a_telegram_bot_from_scratch_r/ec66wpe/
1547840847
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
luxtabula
t2_dt0qb
Well, you kinda can use that stuff if you run the wsl implementation.
null
0
1544135304
False
0
eb8wkao
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t1_eb8bj4f
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8wkao/
1547278965
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
poloppoyop
t2_9a5a3
> but nobody likes XML these days Well some people like it. And pgsql support for XML is ok. And once playing with XML you get the full XML ecosystem available. Everything JSON is just starting to get because yeah it can be hard to learn from 0 but they did not get there for no reason. And JSON will end-up as bloated and we'll see another randomly named format before 2030 with a new generation of devs who have to rediscover why things are as they are again.
null
0
1545297789
False
0
ec66y9k
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec651ba
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec66y9k/
1547840866
-7
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
yulingc
t2_15gf94
Wow, I can imagine how painful your experiences might be. Seems like you need to make the first move to try to show them that you can bring value to each other- not saying it's easy, but worth the try. Do you have accounts to access the projects?
null
0
1544135325
False
0
eb8wlm2
t3_a3oael
null
null
t1_eb8eu48
/r/programming/comments/a3oael/zeplin_vs_invision_best_tool_for_design_handoff/eb8wlm2/
1547278981
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
cyberknight77
t2_evm0u
I see it in use very often in the Java enterprise field.
null
0
1545297812
False
0
ec66ysi
t3_a7r8qv
null
null
t1_ec5wqsc
/r/programming/comments/a7r8qv/eclipse_410_released/ec66ysi/
1547840873
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
HeWhoWas
t2_3c29o
It doesn't matter where your servers are located. It doesn't even matter if you're a business that is registered or has a presence in Australia. The (retarded) law obligates anyone who provides services to any number of end users in Australia. Of course, enforcement will be a joke for a while - unless/until the rest of the 5 eyes implement it as well. I live in NZ. I run a business (well, one man shop) that contracts to large Australian technology providers. I honestly have no fucking idea what this means for me.
null
0
1544135341
False
0
eb8wmok
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb7o8yr
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8wmok/
1547278994
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
KieranDevvs
t2_j3cj8
According to statistics, the market for Java is dominated by eclipse.
null
0
1545297909
False
0
ec6712b
t3_a7r8qv
null
null
t1_ec5wqsc
/r/programming/comments/a7r8qv/eclipse_410_released/ec6712b/
1547840901
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Dragdu
t2_gja1g
1) :scream: at your PCH 2) Think of it as passing (piping) the data around, just like you do in bash
null
0
1544135346
False
0
eb8wmyv
t3_a3lvtr
null
null
t1_eb8jnmc
/r/programming/comments/a3lvtr/c20_standard_ranges_eric_niebler/eb8wmyv/
1547278998
8
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
bobappleyard
t2_35nzn
So it mentions that it can't do union types but no mention of reflective capabilities e.g. Object.keys Which is surprising.
null
0
1545297970
False
0
ec672io
t3_a7rpo2
null
null
t1_ec5o5tb
/r/programming/comments/a7rpo2/assemblyscript_a_typescript_to_webassembly/ec672io/
1547840919
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Someguy2020
t2_hjq4f
Because it’s controlled by google.
null
0
1544135390
False
0
eb8wpp3
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t1_eb8s00n
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8wpp3/
1547279031
12
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Synapse84
t2_4feg5
Ah ok, people are usually quick to attack Linux, so wasn't sure if you were serious or not.
null
0
1545298067
False
0
ec674qt
t3_a7hbku
null
null
t1_ec65bpb
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec674qt/
1547840946
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
huesoso
t2_bsspm
And then how do you ensure that nobody hijacks this secondary key? You've just weakened the security by adding a secondary point of access. Plus, I suspect (but I'm out of my depth here) that it may be mathematically impossible to implement this without using a weaker algorithm.
null
0
1544135405
False
0
eb8wqow
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb7985w
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8wqow/
1547279044
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
BobTheSCV
t2_56sfa
I switch between Eclipse and IntelliJ about once or twice a year, when some daily annoyance with the current IDE gets so annoying I rage quit and switch IDE and change to another set of daily annoyances. Java.
null
0
1545298425
False
0
ec67cxt
t3_a7r8qv
null
null
t1_ec5wqsc
/r/programming/comments/a7r8qv/eclipse_410_released/ec67cxt/
1547841075
7
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Someguy2020
t2_hjq4f
Yup. You would think people would look at android and re-evaluate their view of google and open source.
null
0
1544135422
False
0
eb8wrp0
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t1_eb8se3y
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8wrp0/
1547279056
42
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
bvierra
t2_3obum
> The first date seems to be at the end of '16 ? Sorry just a typo :) It was 11/23/16 > The discussion seems to mention very few big users and starts of with mentioning chrome plugins artificially inflating those numbers. Correct for the 2016 report, the Jul 20th report is after the majority of the plugins being moved off of DomV0: > Element.createShadowRoot() (representative for Shadow DOM V0 usage) > https://www.chromestatus.com/metrics/feature/timeline/popularity/456 (~1.7%) > According to internal per-OS breakdown data, Android is the lowest (~0.85%) and other desktop OSes are all higher than 1.7%. It could mean that still some extensions use this. On httparchive mobile sites, we have only ~260 URLs out of Alexa 500,000 top mobile sites (~0.45%, because UMA takes page views into account, number % of top URLs must be smaller than UMA). By reaching out non-polyfilled sites we think we can reduce the pageview-based number of non-polyfilled sites to below 0.1% within this deprecation period. They assume since desktop is approx double that of android that it could mean some extension still use it. From the 1st post: > This is the second intent, the first one was to deprecate only Shadow DOM V0 in Nov. 2016 after Shadow DOM V1 shipped. We withheld deprecating mostly because we had not analyzed the usage at that time. > Since then, we identified the most major users of Shadow DOM V0 and reached out to them (AdBlock Plus, AdBlock) , and helped them moving away from Shadow DOM V0, which resulted in significant usage drop (14% to 2% - considering the usage was 2.2% at the previous intent post with a different measurement method than today, current 2% corresponds to ~0.3% at that time). > checked FF Chrome and IE and all had "Element.createShadowRoot()" Sorry I meant I loaded youtube and then looked at the js source and searched for createShadowRoot(), all 3 of browsers had the code in the source. (Someone from Mozilla said a while ago that Google added the DOM V0 which made FF 5x slower and then provided a different js to IE that did not have the DOM V0 which he was using as the reason that Google was attacking FF. My point was that if they were doing this, you would expect it to still be the same way however it is not. Google is providing the same code to every browser. > It is a Google specific optimization that is guaranteed to make the site perform worse(polyfills) than the old version on every other browser. Not at all, this is misunderstanding the issue. When the DOM V0 Specification and JS implementation came out it had an API. People created the scripts using this API, once DOM V1 came out it was clear that MS and FF would not implement the DOM V0 Spec into their browsers. DOM V1 had a completely changed API that would require a lot of changes to change from V0 to V1 (function names changed, variables passed may have changed type or order, etc) To help people using V0 a polyfill was created, this polyfill would just be an extra js script include on the page. The polyfill would check browsercapabilities and see if it implemented DOM V0, if it did, the polyfill did nothing. If however the browser did not support DOM V0 and did support DOM V1 the polyfill would bind to the V0 namespace and when a DOM V0 api call was ran the polyfill would take that call rewrite it so it was compatible with DOM V1 and then pass it on to the browser, which would do what it was supposed to do and pass the return to the polyfill, which would rewrite to the DOM V0 spec again and pass it back to the original script. Now if you look at the timing of everything here Google most likely started the youtube site rewrite when V0 was in beta AND was already in use by WebUI and DevUI in Chrome (so proven to be stable as well as supported by at the very least a Google Associated Team). Time goes by and V1 gets implemented by IE and FF and it becomes clear that they wont support V0... The YT product team reviews where they are at, the time and cost associated with rewriting the code they already have and make a decision that they will stick with V0 since it will get support as well as the fact that it will still run everywhere (albeit with a slight delay going through the middleware) knowing that they would most likely have to replace it in the future. I am sure like every company they were under deadlines and it was far enough along that rewriting would have caused a huge delay. That all being said it is NOT a Google specific optimization. It is a W3C Working Group Spec, just like every other web based standard out there today. On top of that, Chrome was [not](https://caniuse.com/#search=shadow%20dom) the only browser or engine to implement it, FireFox and IE decided not to and that is their choice however that doesn't mean Chrome should be limited from using the tech they choose to use. Now why the difference in speed, more than anything else it is because google handles it 100% in native code whereas FF and IE have to have a wrapper that is made in JS to convert the data to what FF and IE support. On top of that FF opened a [bug](https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1205323) to support DOM V0 in 09/15, they just did not due to till 11/18 because they did not prioritize it. That is 100% their right, however they dont then get to complain that the tech, they did not implement for 3 years, gives their competitors an advantage... The argument that they did implement but a newer version is also complete BS. They could have implemented the V0 wrapper in native code as well which would have fixed their issue, once again they chose not to. What if they decided that they were not going to support HTTP/1.1 because HTTP/2.0 was now out and that meant that handling the connection to HTTP/1.1 would have to be done in JS (yea not a perfect example, I know) and they were orders of magnitude slower connecting to older servers, would you be arguing that all new servers have to support HTTP/2.0 and that if they don't it's only to hurt FF? Also lets look at the HUGE performance difference is here... The [initial page load time](https://twitter.com/cpeterso/status/1021649116391075840) takes a few extra seconds. All subsequent pages are comparable in speed. You would think if Google wanted to hurt FF they would actually make everything slower, not the initial page load time and not by just a few seconds.
null
0
1545298450
False
0
ec67din
t3_a7jj68
null
null
t1_ec636k5
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec67din/
1547841082
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
kwiwksh
t2_1ng1hbr6
I love Firefox but this comes off horribly. I may not agree with Microsoft switching to Chromium, its not as if Google owns Chromium and Mozilla should know better than to imply that to push their own browser. EDIT: To clarify, I would have preferred to see Microsoft use Gecko/Quantum, but apparently those are very difficult to use in a custom browser implementation. Considering Microsoft's recent OSS contributions, I think we'll see very quickly how open Chromium is to taking their commits.
null
1
1544135517
1544136291
0
eb8wxjw
t3_a3t3rg
null
null
t3_a3t3rg
/r/programming/comments/a3t3rg/goodbye_edgehtml_the_mozilla_blog/eb8wxjw/
1547279128
-14
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
loup-vaillant
t2_3vfy2
Knowing /u/glacialthinker from previous comments, I'd guess C++ itself. And I would mostly agree (though I don't program games). C++ is a very complex language, that inherited all the mistakes of C because the industry was too stupid to even consider using two different compilers even if they're binary compatible. These days, if C is enough, I prefer to use C. When it's not, I try to reach for a higher level language with garbage collection. C++ is only a last resort, and now that we have Rust (and D, and Zig, and Nim…), it may no longer be needed at all.
null
0
1545298618
False
0
ec67hgx
t3_a7rit7
null
null
t1_ec63tzl
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec67hgx/
1547841131
7
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
pydry
t2_lhewq
>I do feel there is a space for something more like YAML but not as complex. One of the problems is which person's subset do we migrate to As far as I'm aware there aren't any others. >I think it is a mistake though for adoption to rely exclusively on the end-users code for types. It is very useful for languages like python to easily load and dump the data. Python can load it easily, it will just assume strings unless directed otherwise. I don't think writing a schema is such a chore, though. Counter-intuitively, find it usually makes prototyping quicker because you get fewer head-scratching "ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 10:" type errors and more "on this line of the config file here i was expecting an int and got an 'x' type errors".
null
0
1544135527
False
0
eb8wy7t
t3_a3q7y5
null
null
t1_eb8ohy7
/r/programming/comments/a3q7y5/what_is_wrong_with_toml/eb8wy7t/
1547279137
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
combinatorylogic
t2_iab4d
> This cannot be done to other programming languages because their syntax are rigid. This is wrong. Any language can have a syntax as flexible as you like (as long as you implement its parsing the right way, of course). Stack machines are insanely useful, but they have their limitations. Firstly, an efficient direct hardware implementation is very complicated - try to do a *superscalar* stack machine. No more register renaming for you here, and every single instruction depends on the order of execution of the previous instructions. Secondly, it's actually *harder* to compile code into a stack machine *efficiently*. An ad hoc dumb compiler that does not do anything at all in between is trivial indeed, but what if you want to analyse and optimise the code first? You'd unavoidably go into a CPS or an SSA, and both forms make it harder to emit an efficient stack machine code afterwards. The only reasonable approach I found is to partially *decompile* your SSA into a tree form first, and then do the dumb codegen, instead of trying to reorder virtual register definitions in some smart ways.
null
0
1545298630
False
0
ec67hqp
t3_a7m6jc
null
null
t1_ec65ujm
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec67hqp/
1547841135
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
HeWhoWas
t2_3c29o
> Stop voting Liberals ffs. Because the rest of the government put up such a good fight, yeah?
null
0
1544135559
False
0
eb8x06m
t3_a3kk7u
null
null
t1_eb7d26a
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8x06m/
1547279162
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
DJviolin
t2_ibp62
If storage drivers become a reality and it will have native graph storage (no more OpensGraph sugar on top of it), Postgres will liberate the noSQL databases, too. But probably we are years away from this.
null
0
1545298643
False
0
ec67i1q
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t3_a7q1bi
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec67i1q/
1547841138
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
DutchmanDavid
t2_7gbkd
Do mean in that timeline or this one? Because ABC already did that in this one: www.engadget.com/2015/10/02/alphabet-do-the-right-thing/
null
0
1544135627
False
0
eb8x4fq
t3_a3q1vh
null
null
t1_eb8qbbj
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8x4fq/
1547279214
5
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Rainfly_X
t2_4gzg3
I forget where I read this recently, but someone had a great observation that general-purpose NoSQL software is basically useless, because any software for gargantuan scale data must be custom fitted to specific business needs. The white papers, the engineering efforts at Google/FB/Twitter... each of those was useful because it was a tailored product. Products like Mongo take every lesson they can from such systems... except the most important one, about whether generic products like this should exist at all. I don't know if I buy into this opinion entirely myself, but a lot of shit clicks into place, so it's worth pondering.
null
0
1545298709
False
0
ec67jhx
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec5pi1a
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec67jhx/
1547841157
30
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null