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False
|
Ameisen
|
t2_5qad2
|
No, it doesn't. It means that you are allowed to submit changes, or fork it. They are under no obligation to *accept* such changes.
| null |
0
|
1544137069
|
False
|
0
|
eb8zeik
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8xe26
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8zeik/
|
1547280287
|
14
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1545301553
|
1545757295
|
0
|
ec69963
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5sf1d
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec69963/
|
1547841946
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
movie_criticdotexe
|
t2_25rvkgt
|
Almost like it was passed by uninformed, oblivious old people
| null |
0
|
1544137107
|
False
|
0
|
eb8zgmt
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb6zzsq
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8zgmt/
|
1547280313
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
GraveSalad
|
t2_16p06e
|
>in reference to slowless
I don't think you get to sit and call people retarded and put a spelling mistake right after it.
| null |
0
|
1545301571
|
False
|
0
|
ec699lv
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5nqro
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec699lv/
|
1547841952
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
metamatic
|
t2_4a9rt
|
It's chugging along, steadily being improved. One of the main areas of improvement recently has been to make it a lot more self-tuning, so that you can just install it and use it and expect reasonable performance, rather than have to read a bunch of manuals and tweak parameters. Also defaults are more sensible in areas like character encoding (UTF-8), [SQL support is improved](https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/SSEPGG_11.1.0/com.ibm.db2.luw.wn.doc/doc/c0054107.html), etc.
(Disclaimer: I work for IBM, but not on the DB2 team. Opinions mine not the company's, etc.)
| null |
0
|
1544137114
|
False
|
0
|
eb8zh0i
|
t3_a3dobm
| null | null |
t1_eb8drzj
|
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb8zh0i/
|
1547280318
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
davidk01
|
t2_1c5pc
|
These limitations make sense in the context of ahead of time compilation. As the page says supporting all the features requires a runtime which defeats the performance benefits you get with ahead of time compilation.
| null |
0
|
1545301581
|
False
|
0
|
ec699tf
|
t3_a7rpo2
| null | null |
t1_ec5o5tb
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rpo2/assemblyscript_a_typescript_to_webassembly/ec699tf/
|
1547841955
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
wayoverpaid
|
t2_5elfh
|
So you prefer having one *less* company having power and influence over the world's most popular browser? Way to think!
| null |
0
|
1544137120
|
False
|
0
|
eb8zhc5
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8i93j
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8zhc5/
|
1547280323
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
aykcak
|
t2_dwrtu
|
> fad-ware
Is this a word? Can I use it? I sounds like it is what I needed for describing a lot of modern javascript development
| null |
0
|
1545301652
|
False
|
0
|
ec69beq
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec50wqk
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec69beq/
|
1547841974
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
lordkoba
|
t2_3gkog
|
you are high
| null |
0
|
1544137126
|
False
|
0
|
eb8zhpd
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb86dsl
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8zhpd/
|
1547280326
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
davidk01
|
t2_1c5pc
|
Object.keys is not reflective when everything has a specific type. Any object will have a static type which reduces Object.keys to a compile time array computation.
| null |
0
|
1545301670
|
False
|
0
|
ec69bsl
|
t3_a7rpo2
| null | null |
t1_ec672io
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rpo2/assemblyscript_a_typescript_to_webassembly/ec69bsl/
|
1547841978
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
calsosta
|
t2_5hqbj
|
Well Firefox's market share is definitely shrinking, however as a developer I like what Mozilla is doing and I think it might swing back up.
I use Chrome on the Desktop and Firefox Focus on Mobile.
| null |
0
|
1544137157
|
False
|
0
|
eb8zjh3
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8o8vv
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8zjh3/
|
1547280348
|
8
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
bvierra
|
t2_3obum
|
There is also no guarantee that other clients wont slow down running code for the webmail on their browsers so they can complain how much slower it is in their browser...
Every e-mail server in the world has to read the entire text of any email that goes through it. They have to read the headers to process the email and the email in its entirety to transfer it on, either to an internal mailbox or to an outside domain. Not to mention if you want to have any sort of virus blocking it has to read the entire email to see if any parts of it match a signature of a virus. Oh and if you like getting (at least some) spam (and lets be real, ham as well) filtered out they have to read and process every character that goes through to match it against a database of known spam.
> I can only imagine what Google is keeping with full e-mail and search histories available
I can imagine, in fact I can tell you exactly what they are keeping... the emails and search histories.
> Even if I opt-out, there's a good chance the e-mail will go to someone using Gmail as their provider
That is 100% true, but guess what... you are not being forced to send an email to anyone, you choose to. Do you complain that if you write a handwritten letter to someone that they can show it to anyone they choose to? or even worse that they could carelessly leave it on a table at starbucks where anyone there could read it?
How about the fact that every phone call you make on a cell phone could actually be picked up by someone using a stringray type device (and not just the govt... the tech behind stingray is simple, its the encryption keys for the provider that are harder to get).
Even easier than that, if you use you wifi at school everything you do on that network is going to be logged and could be monitored in real time hopefully by the school's IT dept and not the person in the dorm next to you that has a rogue AP setup to MiTM your connection.
The reality is that no one can know anything about you that you don't want them to, if you don't put it out there in the 1st place. To argue that you freely put this information out in the world (or worse online where the data passes through numerous parties to get where it needs to go) and then complain that someone just might use it for something you dont like is batshit crazy.
My parents had a saying when I was growing up, the easiest way to keep people from knowing that I made out with some girl is to not make out with her in the first place. Then there is nothing for people to know. You cannot control all variables at all times so you either take the risk of doing the action knowing that someone could find out, or you don't do the action.
| null |
0
|
1545301747
|
False
|
0
|
ec69dj4
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec68j34
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec69dj4/
|
1547842000
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
WNIG0sQpBlkHQa9fbjDp
|
t2_y14teet
|
Why the downvotes? This guy is right. They're all money-driven monopolies.
| null |
1
|
1544137183
|
False
|
0
|
eb8zkuv
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8i00q
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8zkuv/
|
1547280365
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
_pupil_
|
t2_3riih
|
Take it and run free :)
| null |
0
|
1545301774
|
False
|
0
|
ec69e4a
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec69beq
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec69e4a/
|
1547842008
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
knome
|
t2_1p9n0
|
main =
let 10 / 10 = 3.14 in
putStrLn $ show $ 10 / 10
https://repl.it/repls/PointedBestOffices
I don't know. It works in my universe. Maybe you should double check your compiler.
| null |
0
|
1544137184
|
False
|
0
|
eb8zkx5
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb8ye75
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8zkx5/
|
1547280366
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
certified_trash_band
|
t2_mf5tg2x
|
I always liked the motto "[Snapchat for Databases](https://github.com/mikemaccana/stickers)".
| null |
0
|
1545301798
|
False
|
0
|
ec69enh
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec617au
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec69enh/
|
1547842015
|
9
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
moonsword17
|
t2_pakaf
|
I believe that In a base-n system, the digits '10' == n
| null |
0
|
1544137190
|
False
|
0
|
eb8zl91
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb82nqs
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8zl91/
|
1547280370
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
RaptorXP
|
t2_e0lgi
|
Yes I was attacking Linux. Everyone knows it takes a lot of effort to get up and running with Linux. Certainly a lot more than right clicking on an icon.
| null |
0
|
1545301828
|
False
|
0
|
ec69fcj
|
t3_a7hbku
| null | null |
t1_ec674qt
|
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec69fcj/
|
1547842024
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
butler1233
|
t2_gcfx2
|
It's "open source" sure, but it's still primarily controlled by Google so they can continue steamrolling the web with whatever stupid shit they want.
| null |
0
|
1544137190
|
False
|
0
|
eb8zl9z
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8ru44
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8zl9z/
|
1547280371
|
8
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
moschles
|
t2_e8kks
|
> Python because you can do really anything with it.
(While Python can do multiprocesssing) it cannot do multithreading!!
Python cannot interact with openGL without going with a JS wrapper of some kind.
Python cannot interface with CUDA hardware unless it talks through libraries written in C.
Python is not a tool for systems programming or writing kernels.
Python is the wrong tool to write a compiler in.
(Can Python be used to write mobile Android apps? I would assume the answer is no.)
Again for emphasis, I did not say that "Python sucks as a language" -- I am specifically addressing this claim that "it can do anything".
| null |
0
|
1545301850
|
1545303829
|
0
|
ec69ftl
|
t3_a7rit7
| null | null |
t3_a7rit7
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec69ftl/
|
1547842030
|
-5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Cowabunco
|
t2_n4f7viu
|
There was a version of Fortran you could actually almost do this in - I don't think you could assign a floating-point number to an integer 2, but you definitely used to be able to overwrite a constant...
| null |
0
|
1544137200
|
False
|
0
|
eb8zlsn
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7yr0e
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb8zlsn/
|
1547280377
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
killerstorm
|
t2_m827
|
It seems like the guy is exploring functional programming and higher-order functions using his own crappy terminology.
| null |
0
|
1545301882
|
False
|
0
|
ec69gjr
|
t3_a7mo7v
| null | null |
t3_a7mo7v
|
/r/programming/comments/a7mo7v/javascript_gettersetter_pyramid/ec69gjr/
|
1547842038
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
wayoverpaid
|
t2_5elfh
|
I've been waiting for news that Microsoft is no longer working on the NT Kernel and the next version of Windows will switch all their Linux emulation over to native. NT emulation will last for a few more years before being quietly retired.
| null |
0
|
1544137259
|
False
|
0
|
eb8zp4n
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8vzeu
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8zp4n/
|
1547280419
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
kerayeu
|
t2_wm5xv
|
I think he is ld;dr'ing the answer to the question in the title:
> Did Google cripple Edge’s youtube performance?
> lolno
| null |
0
|
1545301918
|
False
|
0
|
ec69hag
|
t3_a7k0an
| null | null |
t1_ec4qszy
|
/r/programming/comments/a7k0an/did_google_cripple_edges_youtube_performance/ec69hag/
|
1547842048
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
pvlplv
|
t2_1d0zizeh
|
Upvote man, keep hanging
| null |
0
|
1544137303
|
False
|
0
|
eb8zrhm
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8kc4o
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb8zrhm/
|
1547280447
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
m50d
|
t2_6q02y
|
If the operations you want to do are by-key lookups and batch reporting queries, you're fine. IME even with a traditional SQL database you end up needing to segregate your production queries into those two categories.
The one thing SQL databases are good for that other datastores aren't is semi-ad-hoc reporting queries - they make it easy to have a bunch of indices that are implicitly updated on write (though of course you pay for that in terms of write performance) and then it'll automagically figure out which one to use for your reporting query (great except when it picks the wrong one, or can't find one to use at all, and then your query just silently runs slowly if you're lucky, and blocks all your other queries too if you're not).
| null |
0
|
1545301946
|
False
|
0
|
ec69hvp
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec55z1o
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec69hvp/
|
1547842055
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
stupodwebsote
|
t2_16iquzue
|
Microsoft is officially in the phase of THE ZEAL OF THE CONVERT!!!!!
| null |
0
|
1544137463
|
False
|
0
|
eb9005e
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb86t0c
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb9005e/
|
1547280555
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
MCSajjadH
|
t2_wfe2n
|
TLDR; Slack terminates any account that has been accessed from an Iranian IP ever, or if they think you've had relations to Iran in any way, termination includes those who live outside of Iran.
Slack is saving your access log over long periods of time, and not only that but also it restricts people based on it.
Stop using it for your own sake!
| null |
1
|
1545301988
|
False
|
0
|
ec69ivo
|
t3_a7wm0z
| null | null |
t3_a7wm0z
|
/r/programming/comments/a7wm0z/slack_terminated_an_account_because_they_thought/ec69ivo/
|
1547842067
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
TinyImprovement
|
t2_1yt5ramf
|
Stop being a fucking pedant. Everyone who isn't being a twat knows that "contributing" to open source projects includes opening pull requests, whether or not they get merged. It also includes answering questions, helping out, updating wikis, etc.
In fact, to be more pedantic, the actual meaning of "contributor" and the thing I just described are essentially the same. You are talking about having write access to the repository. That's also called "being a maintainer". I'd know, I am a maintainer of a large open source project.
| null |
1
|
1544137599
|
False
|
0
|
eb907ka
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8zeik
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb907ka/
|
1547280674
|
-4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
aykcak
|
t2_dwrtu
|
> here is no way to quickly see how many watches you sold last month
I think for something like that you can use CQRS so whichever db you use kind of becomes irrelevant
| null |
0
|
1545302058
|
False
|
0
|
ec69kf2
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec584l6
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec69kf2/
|
1547842086
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Treyzania
|
t2_8vzbi
|
The joke works better if you swap the two "kinds".
| null |
0
|
1544137788
|
False
|
0
|
eb90hv0
|
t3_a3ps00
| null | null |
t1_eb89po6
|
/r/programming/comments/a3ps00/rust_2018_is_here_but_what_is_it/eb90hv0/
|
1547280801
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ascii
|
t2_g70u
|
All true. Last year, Jepsen ran MongoDB tests where they found that reads weren't linearizable and various other pretty serious problems. But to the credit of the Mongo devs, they've actually fixes the low hanging fruit and paid Aphyr to rerun their tests. But there are plenty of consistency aspects that there are no Jepsen tests for, and clustered consistency is incredibly complicated. My trust that they have fixed all issues is low.
Consistency in distributed systems is incredibly hard. In my opinion, either using a non-distributed system where consistency matters or, if you absolutely *have to* use a clustered database, use one that has extremely simple and predictable consistency guarantees, is a good strategy.
| null |
0
|
1545302071
|
False
|
0
|
ec69kpr
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5qfkj
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec69kpr/
|
1547842090
|
5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
workstar
|
t2_dlntw
|
It's trivial to write buggy code. In fact, given that there's unlikely to be any tests or anyone using the feature, the chance of it working properly is quite small.
| null |
0
|
1544137850
|
False
|
0
|
eb90lc5
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7l0ui
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb90lc5/
|
1547280844
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
m50d
|
t2_6q02y
|
Don't do updates. Store an append-only log of things that happened, and generate whatever views or aggregated reporting information you need from that; when you need to change what's in those things you regenerate them from the canonical event log rather than trying to do some kind of in-place update.
| null |
0
|
1545302135
|
False
|
0
|
ec69m4c
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5uuww
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec69m4c/
|
1547842108
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
tenogim
|
t2_meo46
|
Google still needs to approve your contributions
| null |
0
|
1544137934
|
False
|
0
|
eb90psr
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8xe26
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb90psr/
|
1547280899
|
5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
m50d
|
t2_6q02y
|
If you're a programmer, writing a script to aggregate some data from MongoDB is really easy (it's just a map-reduce). With PostgreSQL you have to figure out how to express what you want in a clunky pseudo-English declarative query language (it's a well-known standard and inexplicably popular, but it still sucks and all the tooling for it is terrible) and then hope it executes the right thing.
| null |
1
|
1545302358
|
False
|
0
|
ec69r92
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5x3wv
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec69r92/
|
1547842170
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
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public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
If it becomes a problem other browser vendors could just fork the project
| null |
0
|
1544138011
|
False
|
0
|
eb90tze
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8czf3
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb90tze/
|
1547280951
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Glader_BoomaNation
|
t2_2yw3t45
|
Holy shit that subreddit is garbage.
| null |
0
|
1545302395
|
False
|
0
|
ec69s4r
|
t3_a7rdpt
| null | null |
t1_ec5ze20
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rdpt/microsoft_unveils_windows_sandbox_run_any_app_in/ec69s4r/
|
1547842211
|
3
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t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
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public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1544138070
|
False
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0
|
eb90x65
|
t3_a3t3rg
| null | null |
t3_a3t3rg
|
/r/programming/comments/a3t3rg/goodbye_edgehtml_the_mozilla_blog/eb90x65/
|
1547280990
|
-13
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
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public
| null |
False
|
drjeats
|
t2_4lzhn
|
I learned all that shit (plus XSD) and I still think it's the squarest of pegs most often used for the roundest of holes.
| null |
0
|
1545302614
|
False
|
0
|
ec69xba
|
t3_a7nggt
| null | null |
t1_ec5poey
|
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec69xba/
|
1547842276
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3
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t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
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public
| null |
False
|
macca321
|
t2_3qddw
|
I think he said it gives a warning if there are missing card, not a (compile time) error. I guess you can probably set that watching to be an error yourself.
| null |
0
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1544138100
|
False
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0
|
eb90ys8
|
t3_a3ghju
| null | null |
t1_eb8ydp0
|
/r/programming/comments/a3ghju/whats_new_in_c_80/eb90ys8/
|
1547281010
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1
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t5_2fwo
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r/programming
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public
| null |
False
|
pron98
|
t2_f0thb
|
Compositionality is a property of a system where for every structural ("syntactic") composition of structural elements ("terms"), there is a behavioural ("semantic") composition, such that the behaviour of the composition is the composition of behaviours (⟦A○B⟧ = ⟦A⟧⊙⟦B⟧). The author takes that definition a bit further to additionally require that compositional reasoning be tractable. I think this further requirement is appropriate as it is in line with the spirit of the concept of compositionality, and we can express it precisely by saying that a decision procedure for some property of the composed behavior is to be decided in time that is a function of the *number* of components (we don't even demand that the function is polynomial, as even this weaker requirement generally does not hold).
While I agree that it is desirable to keep systems compositional (according to this strict definition) as "non-compositionality is a barrier to scientific understanding" (although I disagree with the "scientific" in that sentence, as science often deals with non-compositional systems), maintaining it is hard -- indeed, as the author says, it is "extremely delicate" -- as much of the essential power of computation comes from the lack of compositionality (again, according to the author's more demanding definition). The author calls non-compositionality "emergence", i.e. "more than the sum of its parts," but it is this emergence that gives computation its power and allows a relatively succinct structure (syntactic representation) describe the elaborate behaviour necessary for achieving the task. A classic example is that some decision problems on pushdown automata are not only decidable but tractable, yet similar decision problems on a composition of just *two* PDAs is not only intractable, but undecidable. In general, the computational complexity of reasoning [is not closed under most forms of composition](https://pron.github.io/posts/correctness-and-complexity#correctness-does-not-decompose).
So it is easy to say that we *should* keep systems compositional (by this more strict definition), but the reality is that most systems beyond a certain size are not. Without concrete suggestions as to *how* this delicate balance be kept, it's like the demand that government should be kept simple -- nice in principle but so hard in practice, that the recommendation rings hollow. Moreover, I claim -- contrary to some assumptions made by theorists -- that even the thinking process in a programmer's mind when writing software in the real world is often [more empirical than compositional](https://pron.github.io/posts/people-dont-write-programs) (or more inductive than deductive), and similar to the kind of thinking involved when reasoning about biology or economics.
It's great that elegant theoretical frameworks for compositional systems exist, and it's ok to *wish* that more of our real systems were compositional, but saying that they *should* be compositional without showing a feasible path to achieving that, just because it makes theoretical analysis easier, is, I think, a complete reversal of how we should tackle problems.
| null |
0
|
1545302616
|
1545340680
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0
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ec69xce
|
t3_a7tsbm
| null | null |
t3_a7tsbm
|
/r/programming/comments/a7tsbm/on_compositionality/ec69xce/
|
1547842276
|
3
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t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
klysm
|
t2_vhgyt
|
Too complicated for what?
| null |
0
|
1544138104
|
False
|
0
|
eb90yzx
|
t3_a3tk0q
| null | null |
t3_a3tk0q
|
/r/programming/comments/a3tk0q/is_k8s_too_complicated/eb90yzx/
|
1547281013
|
8
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Glader_BoomaNation
|
t2_2yw3t45
|
Slack is following both U.S. and generally agreed upon international law. Can't do business with or in sanctioned countries. You are asking them to violate what I think are not just U.S. sanctions but international sanctions against Iran.
| null |
0
|
1545302620
|
False
|
0
|
ec69xfd
|
t3_a7wm0z
| null | null |
t1_ec69ivo
|
/r/programming/comments/a7wm0z/slack_terminated_an_account_because_they_thought/ec69xfd/
|
1547842276
|
10
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
sorlafloat
|
t2_2q1c255k
|
US broadband isn't that bad. However US _mobile_ data is 2nd world at best.
| null |
1
|
1544138109
|
False
|
0
|
eb90z9f
|
t3_a3sas6
| null | null |
t1_eb8xuoz
|
/r/programming/comments/a3sas6/quic_and_http3_too_big_to_fail/eb90z9f/
|
1547281016
|
-2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
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public
| null |
False
|
m50d
|
t2_6q02y
|
> And you know what else is good for single key/document storage? Files.
If you've already got AFS set up and running then I agree with you and am slightly envious (though even then performance is pretty bad, IME). For any other filesystem, failover sucks. For all MongoDB's faults (and they are many; I'd sooner use Cassandra or Riak) it makes clustering really easy, and that's an important aspect for a lot of use cases.
| null |
0
|
1545302736
|
False
|
0
|
ec6a03i
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5puym
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec6a03i/
|
1547842310
|
3
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t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
caltheon
|
t2_37xon
|
Not having DRM in the web would be a fucking nightmare and limit content severely.
| null |
0
|
1544138213
|
False
|
0
|
eb914y9
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8iijj
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb914y9/
|
1547281086
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1545302765
|
False
|
0
|
ec6a0sy
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5p4wq
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec6a0sy/
|
1547842318
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Thann
|
t2_50as1
|
The M$-flavored-spyware version of google-chrome
| null |
0
|
1544138367
|
False
|
0
|
eb91dk2
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t3_a3q1vh
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb91dk2/
|
1547281222
|
-3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
joaofsoares
|
t2_ouvlp38
|
Indeed, you can use the free version, no problem, but following the intern rules: they don't give support. :)
Just saying because there are some places which use Eclipse nowadays.
| null |
0
|
1545302775
|
False
|
0
|
ec6a11h
|
t3_a7r8qv
| null | null |
t1_ec68j9a
|
/r/programming/comments/a7r8qv/eclipse_410_released/ec6a11h/
|
1547842321
|
3
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t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
TinyImprovement
|
t2_1yt5ramf
|
You can contribute in more ways than just code. Also the act of doing a pull request is a contribution whether or not is is accepted. Sort of how you can contribute stale cheese to a shared pot of food, even if nobody eats it you still contributed.
| null |
0
|
1544138444
|
False
|
0
|
eb91hf6
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb90psr
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb91hf6/
|
1547281270
|
1
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t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
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public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[removed]
| null |
0
|
1545302796
|
False
|
0
|
ec6a1k7
|
t3_a7m6jc
| null | null |
t1_ec68yga
|
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec6a1k7/
|
1547842328
|
1
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t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
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public
| null |
False
|
nunz
|
t2_3g6s9
|
This article is great! Thank you for sharing!
Can I ask-- what are some reasons why people think authentication keys shouldn't be used for SSH? Why not?
| null |
0
|
1544138466
|
False
|
0
|
eb91il9
|
t3_a3pgvn
| null | null |
t3_a3pgvn
|
/r/programming/comments/a3pgvn/how_to_use_gpg_with_yubikey_and_from_wsl/eb91il9/
|
1547281284
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
m50d
|
t2_6q02y
|
And why not? The underlying technology behind relational databases is really good. It's mostly the interface that sucks.
| null |
0
|
1545302798
|
False
|
0
|
ec6a1ls
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec57jsp
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec6a1ls/
|
1547842328
|
1
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t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
magion
|
t2_4kdco
|
You mean to tell me that public companies are driven by money? My entire life has been a lie.
| null |
0
|
1544138507
|
False
|
0
|
eb91km7
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8zkuv
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb91km7/
|
1547281309
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
BulbousAlsoTapered
|
t2_44gyt
|
It'd be better if that bus was prone to frequent breakdowns and had no seats.
| null |
0
|
1545302827
|
False
|
0
|
ec6a2bi
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5w2c3
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec6a2bi/
|
1547842337
|
13
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t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
fromscalatohaskell
|
t2_rprhn
|
well Scala's type system is more powerful
| null |
0
|
1544138511
|
False
|
0
|
eb91ku3
|
t3_a3ps00
| null | null |
t1_eb88jli
|
/r/programming/comments/a3ps00/rust_2018_is_here_but_what_is_it/eb91ku3/
|
1547281312
|
10
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
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public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1545302846
|
False
|
0
|
ec6a2s0
|
t3_a7rit7
| null | null |
t1_ec5xi9a
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec6a2s0/
|
1547842343
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
NeinJuanJuan
|
t2_em5jn
|
Could all push requests contain something like a 'warrant canary' to let others know that no secret requests have been made?
| null |
0
|
1544138530
|
False
|
0
|
eb91lrx
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t3_a3kk7u
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb91lrx/
|
1547281323
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
steamruler
|
t2_5ugxi
|
I mean that if browsers would want to phase it out, they could diminish the value of it by making it no longer update, which means people can't rely on it for things made past that change. Eventually, they can stop attaching it to requests, once it's barely looked at by sites.
| null |
0
|
1545302887
|
False
|
0
|
ec6a3rl
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec4mrck
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec6a3rl/
|
1547842354
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
IcebergLattice
|
t2_7yjo2
|
[KSP is already on it](https://www.reddit.com/r/KerbalSpaceProgram/comments/72bp9u/the_newlyformed_australian_space_agency_launches/)
| null |
0
|
1544138538
|
False
|
0
|
eb91m6i
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7xfud
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb91m6i/
|
1547281328
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
killerstorm
|
t2_m827
|
> There's a hell of a lot more to containers than just process access permissions.
To clarify, I'm considering mostly about fine-grained permission control / sandboxing, needed (badly) for security reasons. Not docker-style containerization.
> Entire kernel namespaces need to be able to be chrooted and functionality needs to be in place to allow them to otherwise act like they're not restricted subsets of themselves
You only need this to be able to run unmodified programs which are used to have access to the entire system.
But if your goal is simply to isolate the program from the rest of the system and give it a predictable environment, you don't need chroot (if the program cooperates).
| null |
0
|
1545303028
|
False
|
0
|
ec6a728
|
t3_a7hbku
| null | null |
t1_ec54rtm
|
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec6a728/
|
1547842395
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
hylaine
|
t2_h0fcc52
|
Such as?
| null |
0
|
1544138582
|
False
|
0
|
eb91ofb
|
t3_a3dobm
| null | null |
t1_eb8xxfx
|
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb91ofb/
|
1547281355
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
m50d
|
t2_6q02y
|
Dysfunctional policies in large software organisations, honestly. If you want to make a change to Java code you have to go through months of approvals and testing, but if you want to make a change to XML that's "just config" and you can do it in production no problem. So move all of your logic into XML and voila.
| null |
1
|
1545303097
|
False
|
0
|
ec6a8ot
|
t3_a7nggt
| null | null |
t1_ec5howf
|
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec6a8ot/
|
1547842415
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Ameisen
|
t2_5qad2
|
Cool. I dont care that you're a "maintainer of a large open source project", nor is your appeal to authority useful, relevant, nor particularly interesting. Are you a forum moderator too?
You are going *way* out of your way here, seemingly countering the fact that Google are the maintainers of Chromium, and thus control the acceptance of all pull requests. So, sure, it's open source in that you have the *potential* to contribute so long as Google accepts the contribution (meaning it doesn't run counter to their interests, the same way they manage every other OSS project they have). You could fork the project, but there are likely things in Chromium that are patented by Google. Open-source licenses make the code available, but they don't relieve the problems of the algorithms or methods being patented.
| null |
0
|
1544138689
|
False
|
0
|
eb91trc
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb907ka
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb91trc/
|
1547281423
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
BulbousAlsoTapered
|
t2_44gyt
|
And json in Postgres can be fully searchable, not just an opaque blob.
| null |
0
|
1545303100
|
False
|
0
|
ec6a8qh
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5w02p
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec6a8qh/
|
1547842416
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
WNIG0sQpBlkHQa9fbjDp
|
t2_y14teet
|
I mean that all of those companies are monopolies in their respective field, the worst kind of public company.
| null |
0
|
1544138696
|
False
|
0
|
eb91u59
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb91km7
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb91u59/
|
1547281428
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
m50d
|
t2_6q02y
|
The three cardinal virtues of a programmer are laziness, impatience and hubris.
(I'd far rather use a library that works under the normal rules of the language than a magical annotation processor that rewrites my bytecode at runtime though. If your language doesn't allow writing a library to do the thing you want, switch to a better language)
| null |
0
|
1545303206
|
False
|
0
|
ec6ab5r
|
t3_a7nggt
| null | null |
t1_ec51zwp
|
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec6ab5r/
|
1547842446
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
Microsoft isn't the Microsoft of the 90s anymore. They no longer dominate the computing world with something like 95% market share.
| null |
0
|
1544138739
|
False
|
0
|
eb91wb3
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8kc4o
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb91wb3/
|
1547281454
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
RobIII
|
t2_5zqad
|
> I am specifically addressing this claim that "it can do anything".
If it's [Turing Complete](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turing_completeness) then it can do "anything", just as well* as any other language can do "anything". That nobody produced something for you to interface with CUDA or wrote a compiler in Python doesn't mean it can't be done. It just isn't, yet. If people can build a [gameboy emulator in Minecraft](https://www.polygon.com/2016/7/4/12093306/minecraft-pokemon-fire-red-game-boy-advance) you can sure as hell write a compiler in Python.
\* As in: can be done, I'm not saying it will perform or whatever.
| null |
0
|
1545303222
|
False
|
0
|
ec6abiz
|
t3_a7rit7
| null | null |
t1_ec69ftl
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec6abiz/
|
1547842450
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Bromlife
|
t2_lzyu7
|
You'll get back a form letter with their signature. They may or may not have read it. My advice is to ask them to not forward your concerns on and that you specifically want their opinion on the subject, that will at least force them to read it.
| null |
0
|
1544138761
|
False
|
0
|
eb91xfd
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb8p699
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb91xfd/
|
1547281467
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
-mewa
|
t2_wcwvs
|
>you get the full XML ecosystem available
Including some unobvious security holes if you're lucky!
| null |
0
|
1545303226
|
False
|
0
|
ec6abms
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec66y9k
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec6abms/
|
1547842451
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
karavelov
|
t2_4o1r7
|
It is quite easy for aws to put Sydney redion on the same grounds as bjs - new auth stack and a some firewall rules. The problem is what happens with the engineers in the Sydney office, fire them all? Stop trusting them? What use they can be if there in no trust?
| null |
0
|
1544138796
|
False
|
0
|
eb91z74
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7vxiu
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb91z74/
|
1547281489
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Cooleur
|
t2_j4kvh
|
[https://github.com/seanpmaxwell/mail-promise/blob/master/index.ts](https://github.com/seanpmaxwell/mail-promise/blob/master/index.ts)
​
For a code this small, and an abstraction this "poor" in features, I suggest everyone to simply duplicate and own the code instead of relying on yet another third-party dependency, that wraps itself other dependencies, especially such a dispensable one as 'bluebird' for simple Promise creation.
​
Not to say that this is bad, this is concise and fine (and typed :)). But it's fine as is in a codebase, not in a package.json dependency.
​
| null |
0
|
1545303271
|
False
|
0
|
ec6acm7
|
t3_a7ubih
| null | null |
t3_a7ubih
|
/r/programming/comments/a7ubih/mailpromise_simple_email_service_for_nodejs_and/ec6acm7/
|
1547842464
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
notgreat
|
t2_5037f
|
Microsoft is losing the browser war now, so it makes sense to give up there. They're winning the OS war for most consumers still, so why would they give it up?
| null |
0
|
1544138797
|
False
|
0
|
eb91z96
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8zp4n
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb91z96/
|
1547281490
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
nachof
|
t2_smnh
|
The US military is a criminal organization responsible for innumerable human rights violations worldwide. If you support them at all you're either a shitty person or brainwashed.
| null |
0
|
1545303314
|
False
|
0
|
ec6adko
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec47qmh
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec6adko/
|
1547842476
|
5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
karavelov
|
t2_4o1r7
|
It is quite easy for aws to put Sydney redion on the same grounds as bjs - new auth stack and a some firewall rules. The problem is what happens with the engineers in the Sydney office, fire them all? Stop trusting them? What use they can be if there in no trust?
| null |
0
|
1544138808
|
False
|
0
|
eb91zsl
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7vxiu
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb91zsl/
|
1547281497
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
MrStickmanPro1
|
t2_eo5qu
|
Tell me more about those mysterious daily annoyances with IntelliJ
| null |
0
|
1545303321
|
False
|
0
|
ec6adqz
|
t3_a7r8qv
| null | null |
t1_ec67cxt
|
/r/programming/comments/a7r8qv/eclipse_410_released/ec6adqz/
|
1547842478
|
-5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
flukus
|
t2_3855p
|
> How is the rewrite-everything-in-rust going?
Is this still happening? There should be a new trendy language to rewrite stuff in by now.
| null |
1
|
1544138837
|
False
|
0
|
eb9219j
|
t3_a3ps00
| null | null |
t1_eb82txx
|
/r/programming/comments/a3ps00/rust_2018_is_here_but_what_is_it/eb9219j/
|
1547281515
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ShinyHappyREM
|
t2_1038di
|
[Standard Operating Procedure](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SOP)
| null |
0
|
1545303349
|
False
|
0
|
ec6aebr
|
t3_a7qjey
| null | null |
t1_ec67szq
|
/r/programming/comments/a7qjey/ryanair_hamiltonian_cycles_and_using_graph_theory/ec6aebr/
|
1547842485
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
irspaul
|
t2_241wrb4s
|
Please consider development headaches and standardize browsers.
| null |
0
|
1544139009
|
False
|
0
|
eb92a8n
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t3_a3q1vh
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb92a8n/
|
1547281625
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
moschles
|
t2_e8kks
|
Turing complete or not, Python cannot do multithreading.
| null |
0
|
1545303433
|
False
|
0
|
ec6ag5r
|
t3_a7rit7
| null | null |
t1_ec6abiz
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec6ag5r/
|
1547842507
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
DennisBednarz
|
t2_13vo61
|
Can't be.
| null |
0
|
1544139014
|
False
|
0
|
eb92aj5
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8v825
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb92aj5/
|
1547281629
|
15
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
mentalfingertrap
|
t2_1b8jcdes
|
I also like this approach. Usually i try and create a sensible set of injected objects that can be fed by factories that are written in java and traceable. The bigest problem i have with @magic is that new guys on the team just think it's ok to have like @Inject 20 times in a class and the state of the software really falls to shit.
| null |
0
|
1545303471
|
False
|
0
|
ec6ah0v
|
t3_a7nggt
| null | null |
t1_ec5p5te
|
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec6ah0v/
|
1547842518
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
magion
|
t2_4kdco
|
You sure about that?
| null |
0
|
1544139047
|
False
|
0
|
eb92c87
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb91u59
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb92c87/
|
1547281650
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
pickyaxe
|
t2_cuqzx
|
exactly this, and what a surprise that this comment gets downvoted.
| null |
0
|
1545303491
|
False
|
0
|
ec6ahfn
|
t3_a7m7kx
| null | null |
t1_ec4nt8w
|
/r/programming/comments/a7m7kx/traveling_santa_a_holiday_puzzle_by_reaktor/ec6ahfn/
|
1547842523
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
m00nh34d
|
t2_4aq6t
|
No just libs, Labor rubber stamped this through both houses as well.
| null |
0
|
1544139056
|
False
|
0
|
eb92co3
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7d26a
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb92co3/
|
1547281656
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
XeroValueHuman
|
t2_4nk2s
|
Problem is that gatekeeping in software development has always been and will probably always be a very subjective process.
So “improvements” in the eye of the gatekeeper.
But i agree with you, there is no alternative model to some form of gatekeeping.
| null |
0
|
1545303658
|
False
|
0
|
ec6al58
|
t3_a79otw
| null | null |
t1_ec1j2v7
|
/r/programming/comments/a79otw/why_programmers_suck_post_from_2009_now_more/ec6al58/
|
1547842569
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
anotherblue
|
t2_3vt86
|
Anyone can submit pull request and maintainer (in this case, Google) can merge it.
However, Microsoft and Google already have working relationship in this space, and it seems that there will be cooperation going forward...
| null |
0
|
1544139093
|
False
|
0
|
eb92ejo
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8hyra
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb92ejo/
|
1547281679
|
7
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Coloneljesus
|
t2_4ek9t
|
And Eclipse does?
| null |
0
|
1545303676
|
False
|
0
|
ec6alj2
|
t3_a7r8qv
| null | null |
t1_ec6a11h
|
/r/programming/comments/a7r8qv/eclipse_410_released/ec6alj2/
|
1547842574
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
TimbuckTato
|
t2_9grxkmt
|
Sorry what's a warrant canary?
| null |
0
|
1544139100
|
False
|
0
|
eb92ev6
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb8j7ql
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb92ev6/
|
1547281682
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
SanityInAnarchy
|
t2_5oygg
|
> How relational is your data? Do you want to optimize certain queries at the expense of others?
It doesn't matter if the current crop of NoSQL databases are slower at handling non-relational stuff than traditional SQL databases. And there are some benchmarks showing Postgres beating Mongo at handling JSON. I wouldn't be surprised if you could literally implement a Mongo compatibility layer on top of Postgres and have it work better.
| null |
0
|
1545303784
|
False
|
0
|
ec6ao15
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec626ex
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec6ao15/
|
1547842604
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
nerdyhandle
|
t2_puy7r
|
>Not really. Google doesn't own Chromium's code
Why do people say this? Google owns Chromium. Chromium is the base code for Chrome. Chrome has some proprietary stuff thrown in. Google absolutely maintains control of the base Chromium code.
You, however, can fork Chromium and control it yourself but again the base Chromium is maintained by Google. Microsoft plans to do just this: they will fork the code and maintain the fork themselves.
Chromium got started when Google opened sourced part of Chromes code base.
All this information is on Chromium's Wikipedia page.
| null |
0
|
1544139102
|
1544139442
|
0
|
eb92f09
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb8pz99
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb92f09/
|
1547281684
|
22
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
sanguine_penguin
|
t2_6sia6
|
I think you hugely underestimate how complex this kind of thing is at scale. They have a decent amount of data and the whole migration had to occur with zero downtime. This is not something that can be done with just a simple python script!
You can only do that by breaking it down into small chunks. Even just moving their document store to Postgres took them over a year!
They said that they might make it more relational in the future but the first step definitely needs to be just getting the data into postgres.
| null |
0
|
1545303784
|
False
|
0
|
ec6ao1d
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5weob
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec6ao1d/
|
1547842604
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
argv_minus_one
|
t2_4hatx
|
And, what, you think the spooks will just shuffle away and forget about the whole thing? That'll just piss them off.
| null |
0
|
1544139116
|
False
|
0
|
eb92foj
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb90lc5
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb92foj/
|
1547281693
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
moschles
|
t2_e8kks
|
> If people can build a gameboy emulator in Minecraft you can sure as hell write a compiler in Python. As in: can be done, I'm not saying it will perform or whatever.
Except what I actually wrote is that Python is the wrong tool for a compiler.
| null |
0
|
1545303821
|
False
|
0
|
ec6aov9
|
t3_a7rit7
| null | null |
t1_ec6abiz
|
/r/programming/comments/a7rit7/computerphile_asks_university_proffessors_about/ec6aov9/
|
1547842616
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
klysm
|
t2_vhgyt
|
Looking at you Js
| null |
0
|
1544139123
|
False
|
0
|
eb92g1p
|
t3_a3crqx
| null | null |
t1_eb6exoq
|
/r/programming/comments/a3crqx/how_i_debugged_a_non_reproducible_bug_with_20k/eb92g1p/
|
1547281698
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
-mewa
|
t2_wcwvs
|
Just because you can doesn't mean you should. Document stores are a perfect use, well, for documents which articles certainly are.
Even if what you're describing sounds simple, there will always be that guy that needs this another feature X and suddenly it will turn out you have a multilayered relational mess.
Please use relational databases where they belong - enforcing *complex* schemas (complex is the key word here) on *critical* information that needs to be transactionally updated (or else a financial loss will occur).
And if you use RDBMS, yes, go Postgres. But first, please verify whether you actually need it.
| null |
0
|
1545303860
|
False
|
0
|
ec6apqf
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5w6b8
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec6apqf/
|
1547842626
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
TwiliZant
|
t2_a9o2s
|
How are these monopolies? How is Apple a monopoly?
| null |
0
|
1544139125
|
False
|
0
|
eb92g4t
|
t3_a3q1vh
| null | null |
t1_eb91u59
|
/r/programming/comments/a3q1vh/its_official_chromium_is_coming_to_microsoft_edge/eb92g4t/
|
1547281698
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
yojimbo_beta
|
t2_1sx0ljkb
|
Sure. It's not my view, so I might mangle it, but here's my best rendition:
For most of the last twenty years, developing for the web has been very simple: you author files in an editor and pop them on a server. There was no transpilation, no Babel, no SASS, just plain HTML, JavaScript and CSS. These technologies had shortcomings but building in them was very simple and easy for newcomers to grasp.
Compare that to today's environment: you want to learn webdev, so you learn JavaScript. You hear that ES6 is all the rage, but IE won't run it, so you need to use Babel. But you can't use Babel without Webpack. You read a tutorial on Webpack and then tutorials for each of the plugins a typical Webpack config requires. It's a total pain, and a difficulty out of proportion to the goal of e.g. rendering a few things on a webpage.
Browsers can already run ES6 pretty much natively, and execute modules without a bundler. They can use advanced CSS features and things like CSS variables without recourse to proprietary languages like SASS or Stylus. As a developer, sticking to native means your knowledge never becomes obsolete, because once something becomes a web standard it stays that way pretty much forever, unlike trendy tech like Coffeescript or GWT that eventually fades away.
JavaScript is not an 'evil'. It is just a scripting language. It has its quirks, but these will rarely hurt you if you are reasonably disciplined. Its type coercion sucks, but then again you shouldn't really be in the habit of smashing together different types in the first place.
| null |
0
|
1545303906
|
False
|
0
|
ec6aqth
|
t3_a7o3p0
| null | null |
t1_ec57uf8
|
/r/programming/comments/a7o3p0/webassembly_is_fast_a_realworld_benchmark_of/ec6aqth/
|
1547842640
|
3
|
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.