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False
Huliek
t2_g5vwi
If you split 5 units into 2.500000002 and 2.499999997 you actually have to make it 2 and 3 or else you'll have created 1 unit from thin air. (it would be a very uncommon calculation in finances to end up there) But you also have to do this when you have an exact 2.5 + 2.5 split (or even 2.500000002 + 2.500000002) so this is not a floating point problem just a general accounting problem. Like practically every 1 cent issue is.
null
0
1544279931
1544282301
0
ebcv6ms
t3_a4a2ks
null
null
t1_ebcnbko
/r/programming/comments/a4a2ks/floats_and_money/ebcv6ms/
1547345627
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
kankyo
t2_77w4q
How about a link to something that contains any information about the language? The wiki link seems not relevant.
null
0
1545426001
False
0
ec9y3q2
t3_a8cf93
null
null
t3_a8cf93
/r/programming/comments/a8cf93/cherrycs_v01_os_project_releasedongoing_project/ec9y3q2/
1547904080
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Valmar33
t2_zbck5
Pretty much. Qt is very best cross-platform C++ GUI framework we currently have.
null
0
1544279975
False
0
ebcv8b6
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcv1ba
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcv8b6/
1547345647
9
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Ajedi32
t2_6h0xg
To be fair, generating lockfiles has been the default behavior of NPM for well over a year now. If you _still_ haven't figured out how to use them (despite being aware of how "`npm install` fucks you" if you don't) that's kinda on you.
null
0
1545426334
False
0
ec9ykgo
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9r5hf
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/ec9ykgo/
1547904287
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
tso
t2_37rbd
The major thing was probably the sale of bundle deals of the computer, some accessories (like the TV modulator), and an assortment of games and software tools (some version of Deluxe Paint keeps cropping up).
null
0
1544280097
False
0
ebcvcok
t3_a44xl7
null
null
t1_ebcsitn
/r/programming/comments/a44xl7/flatline_how_the_amiga_languished/ebcvcok/
1547345701
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
MyWorkAccountThisIs
t2_5xozc
> We're mostly talking about front-end stuff here That's part of my point. While, technically, it is different than the backend I prefer to view from a wholistic point of view. Because ultimately that's what is going to ship. A singular "thing". > been a lot of products out there that just plain did the back-end job better than competitors, but an ugly, clunky, poorly designed UI made people go with a product that didn't do the back-end as well but was easier to work with If the second product succeeded it was the better product. Simple as that. Doesn't matter if the first one had more features and was developed in a better way. If your users can't figure out how to use them because of bad design you have a bad product. You gotta have both to really successful. > That's debatable. As for your views on Apple - they are a little skewed. Don't feel bad. Pretty much everybody around Reddit gets it wrong when trying to compare Apple to something else. They never consider the OS and for a large part of their market that is the reason. Underpowered? Maybe if you only look at a number on a spec sheet but it doesn't work that way. My MacBook Pro can easily run a couple VMs, my IDE, various chats, tons of Chrome tabs, and half a dozen terminal sessions with ease. I've never felt limited by it because some number was lower than another. And fair point. You can't run something like Rainmeter on a Mac. But I'm hard pressed to think of ways I can't customize anything else. It's certainly not locked down. My terminal is the most customized thing on any computer I own. Same goes for my IDE. Again, to be fair, my customization priorities lean towards productivity and not visuals. As you can tell I am bias. I'll take macOS or Linux over Windows any day of the week. You know, unless I want to game.
null
0
1545426392
False
0
ec9yn7o
t3_a7xwy3
null
null
t1_ec9qkwm
/r/programming/comments/a7xwy3/theres_already_a_blueprint_for_a_more_accessible/ec9yn7o/
1547904321
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Nefari0uss
t2_b6dxg
What would you like to know about them? I'd say that after a day or two of using it you should be up to par.
null
0
1544280154
False
0
ebcveui
t3_a3t3rg
null
null
t1_ebaq4e6
/r/programming/comments/a3t3rg/goodbye_edgehtml_the_mozilla_blog/ebcveui/
1547345728
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
yawaramin
t2_77bue
Here's the NodeJS standard library: https://nodejs.org/dist/latest-v10.x/docs/api/ If you want to ship a large standard library with every browser, that's more difficult because then every tab (i.e. nowadays every process in most browsers) would need to load up a large amount of possibly never-used JavaScript.
null
0
1545426431
False
0
ec9yp0s
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec96hi7
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/ec9yp0s/
1547904343
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
DGolden
t2_1pdmi
Ireland too. There is still an [Irish Amiga user group](http://amigausers.ie/#) going! (I'm not personally involved, long time since I did more than occasionally fire up an Amiga emulator, just aware of it)
null
0
1544280161
False
0
ebcvf32
t3_a44xl7
null
null
t1_ebclwss
/r/programming/comments/a44xl7/flatline_how_the_amiga_languished/ebcvf32/
1547345730
5
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
ggtsu_00
t2_72fwy
You don’t need to do UI work twice. When you develop an electron app, you are not making a desktop app, you are making a web app. The electron version is redundant. If you want your app to work offline, there is already standard ways to do that on the web. You want the user to have a desktop icon to launch the app? Just make it a damn URL shortcut.
null
0
1545426475
False
0
ec9yr3c
t3_a8cagl
null
null
t1_ec9qdeu
/r/programming/comments/a8cagl/electron_400_has_been_released_electron_blog/ec9yr3c/
1547904368
6
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
[deleted]
null
0
1544280178
False
0
ebcvfqt
t3_a462ss
null
null
t1_ebbzjh9
/r/programming/comments/a462ss/julia_vs_python_which_programming_language_will/ebcvfqt/
1547345739
-3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
FierceDeity_
t2_vgcz6
I don't even use nodejs or npm at all to be honest, I kind of keep away from it. But even I know how lockfiles work (other languages also use them to great extend). ​ That said, a lockfile doesn't help you if the author depublicized a package
null
0
1545426570
False
0
ec9yvgj
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9ykgo
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/ec9yvgj/
1547904422
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Grawprog
t2_fv6f380
I don't understand why people are being so negative about this article. It's kinda shit ya..and the title is misleading but I think people are missing the point. It's not even really about programming, it's about how he's teaching his kid to rationally think about the different steps and parts and work that goes into making different things. What's wrong with that? That's a great idea. My grandpa used to help me build and take apart electronics and stuff when I was a kid the same way. He's not saying to not teach your kids to program, he's saying it's not enough to just teach them that. The whole point of the article was that teaching your child the syntax of a programming language will not necessarily teach them to be master programmers, they need to also be able to think logically about how things are made and put together and you need to teach them to think this way. The only way for them to do that is to learn to think about things in the world that way.
null
0
1544280502
False
0
ebcvs7c
t3_a4ab10
null
null
t3_a4ab10
/r/programming/comments/a4ab10/im_a_developer_i_wont_teach_my_kids_to_code_and/ebcvs7c/
1547345893
11
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
zqvt
t2_18uf4vq
> but javascript + html + css makes for a much easier UI construction than anything else I've used by far. only if that's the only thing you're familiar with. Writing desktop applications in a language that was designed to put static content on a website by entering plain text into an editor is objectively awful and basically takes you back 20 years (if not more) in tooling.
null
1
1545426660
False
0
ec9yzmy
t3_a8cagl
null
null
t1_ec9qdeu
/r/programming/comments/a8cagl/electron_400_has_been_released_electron_blog/ec9yzmy/
1547904474
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
NotExecutable
t2_fw7wi
I'm not sure what his problem is. He spends quite a lot of time in the post ranting about how software development isn't about static solutions to clear cut problems. I even agree with that. What I fail to understand is where the problem is. Because generally, the same is true for math. Math class isn't about teaching you a bunch of pre-defined problems and how to solve them, but about giving you a huge toolbox with which you can properly identify and then solve your problems. That's why there are so many ridiculous text problems in your overpriced books. He also makes the same mistake as so many other articles and posts like his: That the programming lessons are about career. That's a factor, of course, but not the sole motivation. As a member of society, we should have a basic grasp of how our civilization and the world around us works. That's why chemistry and physics or even history and politics are important, regardless of your career. Computers are involved with every aspect of live in many parts of the world now. We should teach people enough to not revere to that as magic or a black box you mustn't ever poke. There are even people who pride themselves in not understanding anything about computers. That's not good. Edit: And for giving folks a base knowledge about that cornerstone of the modern world, you don't need them to be good developers. You can go about it like teaching math. Skills important for a career developer can always be learnt later.
null
0
1544280705
1544281260
0
ebcw0e2
t3_a4ab10
null
null
t3_a4ab10
/r/programming/comments/a4ab10/im_a_developer_i_wont_teach_my_kids_to_code_and/ebcw0e2/
1547346024
41
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
alex-fawkes
t2_2oxt1ow9
Sorry, I wasn't clear - in my example, you started with an RDBMS containing all data (like you describe). Afterwards, you have two databases - the original RDBMS, which still contains all user data EXCEPT threaded messages, AND a NoSQL db containing ONLY threaded messages under user-date composite keys. The relevant RDBMS tables essentially have foreign keys into the NoSQL db, which acts sort of like a cache but is still actually the canonical threaded message data. With a complex app, you might have 6 different database types containing different data or different views into the same data for different query types. This might help explain what I mean: [https://www.confluent.io/blog/using-logs-to-build-a-solid-data-infrastructure-or-why-dual-writes-are-a-bad-idea/](https://www.confluent.io/blog/using-logs-to-build-a-solid-data-infrastructure-or-why-dual-writes-are-a-bad-idea/)
null
0
1545426666
False
0
ec9yzwf
t3_a7q1bi
null
null
t1_ec9tvtu
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec9yzwf/
1547904477
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
the_bananalord
t2_2mb0h2hf
If you think Slack is bad, don't look at Teams....
null
0
1544280763
False
0
ebcw2oj
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcik9e
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcw2oj/
1547346051
5
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Eirenarch
t2_46hjd
I don't think folder count is simply because of compilation. How about the infinite node_modules inside of node_modules problem that no other package manager I know of has? Every other package manager flattens the dependencies but not npm.
null
0
1545426881
False
0
ec9z9vo
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec91ua0
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/ec9z9vo/
1547904629
6
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
judgej2
t2_19ijo
It could also run DOS in emulation mode (slow, but usable) which opened a vast range of software that could be run. Also ran Mac OS as a native 68000 and was blazingly fast. The ST got me through my last two years of my masters, and served me really well.
null
0
1544280777
False
0
ebcw38m
t3_a44xl7
null
null
t1_ebcdwat
/r/programming/comments/a44xl7/flatline_how_the_amiga_languished/ebcw38m/
1547346059
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
birdbrainswagtrain
t2_car4b
Java is slow! I have proof: Minecraft! /s
null
0
1545426984
False
0
ec9zeq9
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9o8w5
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/ec9zeq9/
1547904689
15
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
the_bananalord
t2_2mb0h2hf
For someone whose primary function on their computer is editing code in a code editor, 600MB is fine by me. That's not unreasonable and any developer's machine can handle that. I piss 600MB. We measure RAM by the GB now, and the notion that developers are whining over their primary application using 600MB of RAM is absurd.
null
0
1544280823
1544288517
0
ebcw55u
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebck1s1
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcw55u/
1547346082
-7
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
[deleted]
None
[deleted]
null
0
1545426994
False
0
ec9zf6n
t3_a8d79o
null
null
t1_ec9p3fc
/r/programming/comments/a8d79o/os_online_tool_to_learn_graphql/ec9zf6n/
1547904695
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Huliek
t2_g5vwi
It's a running joke on reddit. Like rewrites in Rust.
null
0
1544280832
False
0
ebcw5ht
t3_a47s2x
null
null
t1_ebcsxxs
/r/programming/comments/a47s2x/happy_17th_birthday_d/ebcw5ht/
1547346087
-20
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
adjustable_beard
t2_2r5s9y0q
Offline ways like what? Electron is currently the best way to make an offline "web" app.
null
1
1545426999
False
0
ec9zfeg
t3_a8cagl
null
null
t1_ec9yr3c
/r/programming/comments/a8cagl/electron_400_has_been_released_electron_blog/ec9zfeg/
1547904697
-2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
redditsoaddicting
t2_epy8k
> Do you think this loop will also run 128 times? The answer is “NO”. It will run indefinitely. The answer is maybe. If `char` is unsigned, it will keep the same behaviour, [as demonstrated here](https://wandbox.org/permlink/Vg7PkoWHHVMGiZlB). If `char` is signed, two's complement, and 8 bits (as assumed), it's undefined behaviour because of overflow. An infinite loop happens to be the most logical optimization for compilers right now and the most likely behaviour on current hardware in the absence of optimization. > Usually, a character variable takes 1 byte (8 bits) of memory to store a character. A char is always 1 byte. 1 byte is usually 8 bits. It is also not guaranteed to be two's complement, though this [will probably change](https://twitter.com/jfbastien/status/989242576598327296?lang=en), and as I understand it, the author [wants to make a few similar changes](https://youtu.be/JhUxIVf1qok?t=3206), including making a byte 8 bits, so maybe that will end up in C one day.
null
0
1544280851
False
0
ebcw6bd
t3_a4ac7r
null
null
t3_a4ac7r
/r/programming/comments/a4ac7r/code_companion_interesting_infinite_loop_using/ebcw6bd/
1547346097
9
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
thediamondlego
t2_29487blt
did you look under the commands page? That has a list of available commands for the language. Im willing to make adjustment as needed when I get feedback.
null
0
1545427046
False
0
ec9zho6
t3_a8cf93
null
null
t1_ec9y3q2
/r/programming/comments/a8cf93/cherrycs_v01_os_project_releasedongoing_project/ec9zho6/
1547904725
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
homarp
t2_bbas9
I think you mean https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyber_Studio as a precursor of 3D studio. Autocad history is different: http://www.studiodaily.com/2012/01/the-fascinating-story-of-how-autodesk-came-to-be-part-1/
null
0
1544280929
False
0
ebcw9ew
t3_a44xl7
null
null
t1_ebcdwat
/r/programming/comments/a44xl7/flatline_how_the_amiga_languished/ebcw9ew/
1547346135
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
xmsxms
t2_49ws7
And yet he we are.
null
0
1545427129
False
0
ec9zlrf
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9twot
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/ec9zlrf/
1547904775
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
combinatorylogic
t2_iab4d
Pretty much *any* IRC client is better. Any decent IDE (including Emacs and vim) is better than VS Code. You're delusional if you think otherwise.
null
1
1544280959
False
0
ebcwanl
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcu3nl
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcwanl/
1547346151
-3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
thediamondlego
t2_29487blt
You can also go [here](https://www.reddit.com/r/CherryCS/) and I can help with any questions.
null
0
1545427140
False
0
ec9zmac
t3_a8cf93
null
null
t1_ec9y3q2
/r/programming/comments/a8cf93/cherrycs_v01_os_project_releasedongoing_project/ec9zmac/
1547904782
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
qudat
t2_fmp2y
Disagree. I have never had an issue with performance.
null
0
1544280997
False
0
ebcwc5z
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebclxlx
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcwc5z/
1547346170
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
adjustable_beard
t2_2r5s9y0q
Agree to disagree. React makes UI development super nice and easy. I've used Tkinter, QT, and JavaFX to make desktop apps before and those honestly just suck. I love python (it's my main language), I like java/c#, and I love C, but I would never in my life wish to once again make a UI using any of those frameworks. It was just hellish compared to html/css/js.
null
0
1545427153
False
0
ec9zmwo
t3_a8cagl
null
null
t1_ec9yzmy
/r/programming/comments/a8cagl/electron_400_has_been_released_electron_blog/ec9zmwo/
1547904790
9
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
balefrost
t2_6lw8n
WebAssembly is indeed Turing complete. But in the browser, JavaScript is allowed to do things that WebAssembly can't do. WASM can't, on its own, interact directly with the DOM, and the workaround (mirroring things in both the JS and WASM worlds) creates overhead. But the plan is to eventually make these things available to WASM. It's also worth mentioning that WASM isn't a language, at least not in the same sense that JavaScript is a language. It's not generally expected that developers would write WASM "by hand". So when the ancestor comment talked about creating a replacement for JS, WASM by itself isn't that replacement. "C++ compiled to WASM" or "Python compiled to WASM" or "LUA compiled to WASM" would be the replacements.
null
0
1544281003
False
0
ebcwcea
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcjbre
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcwcea/
1547346173
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
janipeltonen
t2_15oqn4
It's bytecode being compiled to instructions at runtime, so it being as fast is not true. While in some esoteric places it might be faster or as fast (due to JIT), straight-up code (coupled with Java OOP madness) tends to be quite slower, especially when you start iterating stuff in arrays. Always allocating to heap and then randomly accessing it is also slow. **But** since slowness is nowadays defined in the web ecosystem, it might be appropriate to call it "as fast" as native code.
null
0
1545427178
False
0
ec9zo5c
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9xu2w
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/ec9zo5c/
1547904805
19
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
balefrost
t2_6lw8n
Sure, and I didn't mean to imply that people on other platforms are OK with inconsistency. I just meant that Mac users have traditionally been very sensitive to those sorts of things, probably more sensitive than users on other platforms.
null
0
1544281087
False
0
ebcwfv4
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcgodc
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcwfv4/
1547346215
8
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
theferrit32
t2_6glap
If a set of functions or classes is in the standard library, you wouldn't need to download it at all. It would be in the JS engine on the endpoint already. Having a more complete standard library would reduce code size of other libraries and sites that need to be downloaded at runtime by the user.
null
0
1545427219
False
0
ec9zq5a
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9rmfp
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/ec9zq5a/
1547904830
21
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
qudat
t2_fmp2y
Referencing IRC is exactly the point I'm making. Only tech savvy people use it, for a reason. You are blinded by your own bias.
null
0
1544281111
False
0
ebcwgvx
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebciw6k
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcwgvx/
1547346228
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
theferrit32
t2_6glap
A lot of Java learning courses have you implement an Array-based List as a learning exercise but ArrayList is still in the Java standard library, so everyone who needs an Array-based List doesn't have to implement their own or import some untrusted 3rd party jar in a gradle build or something.
null
0
1545427306
False
0
ec9zub8
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9pzxu
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/ec9zub8/
1547904881
11
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
combinatorylogic
t2_iab4d
This is not about UX quality or whatever (remember when all the idiots used the shitty ICQ?), just another case of "worse is better", and a freak accident, nothing more. There is a lot of IRC clients that are far better for an average Joe and his granny than this Discord shit (hardly used by anyone but the gamer kids).
null
0
1544281383
False
0
ebcwrg3
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcwgvx
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcwrg3/
1547346359
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
legato_gelato
t2_gmlj5
If someone makes a breaking change to a function signature, e.g. switches two parameters in a new version, and parts of the code uses that while the rest uses the original - then you have a problem :) with duplication that problem is not there.. Edit: https://lexi-lambda.github.io/blog/2016/08/24/understanding-the-npm-dependency-model/
null
0
1545427356
False
0
ec9zwp9
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9xww6
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/ec9zwp9/
1547904910
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Eirenarch
t2_46hjd
It is slow and files are big. For example the GC is currently implemented in wasm which means that they have to ship the code for the GC and it is slower than it can be. Once wasm gets a GC it will be faster and the runtime will be smaller. Also there are problems with objects shared between wasm and the JS environment because there are now two GCs to track the references.
null
0
1544281485
1544282511
0
ebcwva7
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcu2di
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcwva7/
1547346407
5
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
alex-fawkes
t2_2oxt1ow9
Maybe devs who really want to fix these problems should go work sales for 4 years, then come back. Want to get your way? Sell it.
null
0
1545427433
False
0
eca00gi
t3_a806xl
null
null
t1_ec75e6u
/r/programming/comments/a806xl/dark_scrum/eca00gi/
1547904957
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
maep
t2_33133
Sow how does it compare to native performance? I'd expect there to be some overhead, particularly in situations with high io load.
null
0
1544281505
False
0
ebcww0z
t3_a433uo
null
null
t3_a433uo
/r/programming/comments/a433uo/running_unmodified_nginx_compiled_to_webassembly/ebcww0z/
1547346416
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
theferrit32
t2_6glap
This was added after the left-pad incident, so it wouldn't happen again.
null
0
1545427480
False
0
eca02qg
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9jkwa
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca02qg/
1547904987
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Eirenarch
t2_46hjd
I can literally see Slack paint on the screen. Don't know about mac but this happens on every Windows Slack instance I have seen. If you don't see it you have suppressed your expectations to the point you don't see lag anymore.
null
0
1544281548
False
0
ebcwxmz
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcwc5z
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcwxmz/
1547346436
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Doctor_Spicy
t2_zzf2r
I believe is-even uses is-odd.
null
0
1545427492
False
0
eca03ct
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9sjqa
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca03ct/
1547904994
22
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
kandamrgam
t2_y66d5
Can typescript be used for development?
null
0
1544281556
False
0
ebcwxz6
t3_a4al3b
null
null
t3_a4al3b
/r/programming/comments/a4al3b/why_neutralinojs_is_better_comparing_with/ebcwxz6/
1547346440
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
stromboul
t2_bakg
Yeah, but in reality, you get a bajillion times the same modules. * Module B uses SubModule X ~2.3 * Module A uses SubModule X, \^1.4 * Module C uses SubModule X 1.7.8 So you still end up with tons of duplicated even if the list is flattened.
null
0
1545427498
False
0
eca03n4
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9bowr
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca03n4/
1547904997
44
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
NotSoButFarOtherwise
t2_1ha8wt1w
I'm not an educator or child development psychologist. I made an uninformed decision about my kids' upbringing, and so should you.
null
0
1544281691
False
0
ebcx378
t3_a4ab10
null
null
t3_a4ab10
/r/programming/comments/a4ab10/im_a_developer_i_wont_teach_my_kids_to_code_and/ebcx378/
1547346505
11
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
gasolinewaltz
t2_7l5zh
Without overly generalizing, because theres a lot of good devs and engineers in the js community. But my god are a whole lot of them insufferable. There was drama on r/javascript like a month ago because someone flatly said "the gang of four patterns were invented for java and have no bearing on javascript. Java is not extendable and needs patterns". I was not as tactful as a should've been, but when I basically said "That statement is incorrect on so many layers, this is why other engineers lack respect for the js community. " I was called an elitist, a tech bro and told that I was bad for team dynamics. This is the byproduct of bootcamp mills churning out designers that know how to cobble libraries together and amateurs who make a few react apps and call themselves engineers. On top of that, there are so many esoteric stacks for solving specific problems that the above individuals learn one and start using it as a hammer for every project imaginable.
null
0
1545427626
False
0
eca09sy
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9f2n3
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca09sy/
1547905074
19
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
DarkLordAzrael
t2_srtuf
It is the best cross platform UI toolkit regardless of language. You could also separate Qt Widgets and Qt Quick (QML) and it would be the two best cross platform UI toolkits.
null
0
1544281729
False
0
ebcx4sj
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcv8b6
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcx4sj/
1547346525
5
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
muffinheart
t2_485za
I'm reading this and I'm thinking "I would never have figured that out". I'm not worthy!
null
0
1545427631
False
0
eca0a1x
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9s3yn
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca0a1x/
1547905077
5
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
zutajo86
t2_ny421xi
I'm constantly surprised by the difference in performance between Slack and Discord; I'm not sure whether Discord has genius devs or whether Slack just has poor ones. In theory Discord has more to do, the average heavy user has at least 20 servers which can have thousands of people on, leading to hundreds of message events every minute, yet I don't find it to be slow nor a resource hog on my machine. OTOH I've used Slack at a small org with around 10 channels and 80 users, and it's the most clunky and laggy program I've used in ages And of course if we compare this to a similarly-featured chat client written in Qt or something Discord would look stupid too
null
0
1544281842
False
0
ebcx9fc
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcik9e
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcx9fc/
1547346609
13
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
theferrit32
t2_6glap
Java is speedy and efficient compared to Python and Javascript. People complain about it in part because a lot of large enterprises use Java and people hate their jobs at large enterprises, and also because it is very verbose to read.
null
0
1545427641
False
0
eca0aht
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9dsfm
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca0aht/
1547905082
14
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
idobai
t2_fu8kq
Now try that with a large project with hundreds of files open in 2-3 languages.
null
0
1544281872
False
0
ebcxapr
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcpsw2
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcxapr/
1547346626
-6
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
theferrit32
t2_6glap
Agreed. Errors that happen silently and are hard to detect are worse than explicit errors that are loud and easy to detect and correct.
null
0
1545427730
False
0
eca0exs
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9vmc8
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca0exs/
1547905138
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
13steinj
t2_i487l
They aren't switching in the here and now but when Bedrock becomes feature complete they will switch over entirely.
null
0
1544281883
False
0
ebcxb6u
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcpsjd
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcxb6u/
1547346631
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
sendintheotherclowns
t2_4i1vtbg
Does that detract from my first impression of the projects?
null
0
1545427749
False
0
eca0fwm
t3_a83zjo
null
null
t1_ec8gn34
/r/programming/comments/a83zjo/1_year_of_c/eca0fwm/
1547905149
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
xiata
t2_4c2y0
Traditional Mac apps are typically consistent in presentation and behavior. Obviously this has gone to shit more so as of late but it was pretty damn consistent before. Sometimes too consistent to the point I’d have to check the menu bar to make sure I was interacting with the app I intended. Windows apps are a god damn mess of custom window layouts, padding, margins, fonts, colors, borders (and radius), some have transparency, window shapes, titlebar buttons of different sizes and shapes. Oh look a ribbon bar on this app. Edit preferences, file preferences, window preferences?! Seriously, 2 hamburger buttons next to each other (looking at you Spotify)?! Classic/Metro/UWP/WPF/WTF? This app supports keyboard nav, this one doesn’t. This is touch optimized, but this one has tiny hard to hit buttons. Transitions? Or not. HiDPI! Just kidding blurry af. Windows will fix that for you! (No it won’t.) Oh look, always visible scroll bars, wait transparent scroll bars? Jesus Christ double scroll bars. Literally all you have to do is look at Microsoft’s own offerings to know how fucked their UI is (Office, Windows, Visual Studio, Utilities like mmc.exe, UWP). They don’t even have consistent UI as first party developers of their own OS and products which would be hilarious if it wasn’t annoying. Linux is typically more consistent than any windows install but that’s as long as you stay within your window manager’s ecosystem. Cross gnome/kde/whatever and your luck will probably run out even if you attempt to have the same theme across them. While Electron makes it possible for the same LaF across platforms, it’s consistently inconsistent with all of them. And that sucks.
null
0
1544281929
1544283107
0
ebcxd1c
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebbs6s4
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcxd1c/
1547346654
24
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
lispers-anonymous
t2_2e4sc8tt
No hard feelings kid 😎
null
0
1545427860
False
0
eca0lcr
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9jn9g
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca0lcr/
1547905245
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
zutajo86
t2_ny421xi
> If I were doing any kind of web development, the backend (where things can be 200x more sane) would do all the work while the “front end” would be little more than a plain old HTML webpage with an extremely light sprinkling of entirely optional JS. I mean isn't that how it was done traditionally, where each action fired off a request to a PHP script? I don't blame developers for wanting to reduce round trips and have most of the client presentation logic actually done on the client, but I do think SPAs are a step too far unless you're genuinely writing an *app*, not an information retrieval site with a few forms
null
0
1544282033
False
0
ebcxha7
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebc9lzd
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcxha7/
1547346706
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
theferrit32
t2_6glap
It's a quick and easy way to guarantee version numbers match and incompatible versions of packages required by different modules can be installed simultaneously. An improvement would be to deduplicate the dependency packages that are the exact same version number but just required in two different places in the tree. Using a symlink or something. This would require a more complex install process that keeps track of already installed versions and deduplicates them.
null
0
1545428046
False
0
eca0udc
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9xww6
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca0udc/
1547905357
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Garethp
t2_3e6hh
I'd prefer native software. I like native software. Every time I open slack on Ubuntu I'm reminded why I hate Electron. But Skype didn't get an update for 4 years on Ubuntu until they released the electron app. And the only reason I can even use slack as an app on Ubuntu is because it's on electron. Sure, compared to native apps it sucks. But it's still better than but having the app at all
null
0
1544282233
False
0
ebcxpoj
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcs2m4
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcxpoj/
1547346811
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
gcaines
t2_4pfnm
I agree! This thread is about whether node.js has a standard library though, not about whether or not it's used enough.
null
0
1545428112
False
0
eca0xjy
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9rz2l
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca0xjy/
1547905396
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
zutajo86
t2_ny421xi
A quick litmus test for whether the devs have considered the possibility of platform-specific idioms is the menu in which you find the settings dialogue, IIRC it should be {Windows -> File, Linux -> Edit, Mac -> App menu}. Always throws me off when that is violated
null
0
1544282305
1544282509
0
ebcxsyg
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcgodc
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcxsyg/
1547346851
9
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
gasolinewaltz
t2_7l5zh
Class-based and prototype-based models are flavors of the oop paradigm.
null
0
1545428145
False
0
eca0z5g
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9js26
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca0z5g/
1547905416
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
cyrax6
t2_abvp4
Happy 17th birthday, D. - Neegan
null
0
1544282307
False
0
ebcxt1j
t3_a47s2x
null
null
t3_a47s2x
/r/programming/comments/a47s2x/happy_17th_birthday_d/ebcxt1j/
1547346852
6
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
yawaramin
t2_77bue
> man Or woman ;-)
null
0
1545428161
False
0
eca0zw3
t3_a89u0x
null
null
t1_ec9c8b9
/r/programming/comments/a89u0x/framework_independence_using_interfaces_and/eca0zw3/
1547905424
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
idobai
t2_fu8kq
You don't seem to get it - if it needs 600MB for a single file without plugins then how much would it need with some IDE features after opening a medium-sized project? If you "piss" 600MB then you can use an IDE instead which will consume just as much RAM but it'll have better latency, better performance and better features.
null
1
1544282324
False
0
ebcxtr2
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcw55u
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcxtr2/
1547346861
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Dedustern
t2_dcct2a4
I’ve turned down node.js jobs specifically to avoid these amateurs. Wouldn’t mind working with the tech.. but the JavaScript community culture is repulsing for someone who calls him/herself an engineer.
null
0
1545428207
False
0
eca122v
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_eca09sy
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca122v/
1547905452
7
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
postmodest
t2_7y8q1
When Condé Nast really got going, they turned Ars into what they did to Wired: made it a _lifestyle catalog_. So it suddenly got _car reviews_ and paid-for articles about Oracle software. For me things went wrong when they hired their biggest forum troll and gave DrPizza a job.
null
0
1544282328
False
0
ebcxtyc
t3_a44xl7
null
null
t1_ebc7m71
/r/programming/comments/a44xl7/flatline_how_the_amiga_languished/ebcxtyc/
1547346863
7
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
sanglar03
t2_ncw9p
Problem is, you don't know if the packages you really need don't have a deep dependency to these ...
null
0
1545428268
False
0
eca14zi
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9sjqa
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca14zi/
1547905488
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Eirenarch
t2_46hjd
You can use it in the browser.
null
0
1544282367
False
0
ebcxvob
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcxpoj
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcxvob/
1547346885
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
munificent
t2_331sn
Oh, thanks. I'll fix the text.
null
0
1545428279
False
0
eca15il
t3_a8an2s
null
null
t1_ec9r98e
/r/programming/comments/a8an2s/crafting_interpreters_how_to_build_a_hash_table/eca15il/
1547905494
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
mdatwood
t2_h5qqe
> I don't know about you but this statement rubs me off the wrong way. It reeks of elitism and gatekeeping Not that at all. iOS and macOS have had long standing HIGs for a reason. The consistency makes it easier to use the platforms. Notice also that Gruber is very critical of Apple's recent 'marzipan' apps for the same lack of following the long held HIGs. What his statement is saying is that it's sad that new users have come onto the platform without this consistency, so they do not know any better. By the way, Chrome recently changed that command+q no longer quits without holding it down. WTF!
null
0
1544282391
False
0
ebcxwsh
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebbs6s4
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcxwsh/
1547346898
12
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
munificent
t2_331sn
Awesome, thanks! I'll go through and fix those.
null
0
1545428310
False
0
eca16zb
t3_a8an2s
null
null
t1_ec9nqpr
/r/programming/comments/a8an2s/crafting_interpreters_how_to_build_a_hash_table/eca16zb/
1547905512
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Johner1261
t2_b1dqu
I’ve never seen it used as a joke.
null
0
1544282404
False
0
ebcxxd9
t3_a47s2x
null
null
t1_ebcw5ht
/r/programming/comments/a47s2x/happy_17th_birthday_d/ebcxxd9/
1547346906
12
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
somersettler
t2_107toa
> why the JS community doesn't want to learn from things which were discovered/invented decades ago, but always has to reinvent the wheel. speaking on behalf of jswheel.io, I am enraged by your rude attempt to shut down my innovative wheel development. My circular rotation device package has 18,000 stars -- hell, even my medium article explaining how asynchronous spoke architecture renders all previous axels obsolete has over 6,000 retweets -- but now you turn up and instead of releasing your own wheel.js onto npm like a normal person you want to force it onto everybody else? unbelievable
null
0
1545428341
False
0
eca18hz
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec96hi7
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca18hz/
1547905531
8
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Garethp
t2_3e6hh
That's not better than having it as an electron app.
null
0
1544282434
False
0
ebcxysj
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcxvob
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcxysj/
1547346923
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
magenta_placenta
t2_3bhyn
Repo here: [wav2letter - Facebook AI Research Automatic Speech Recognition Toolkit](https://github.com/facebookresearch/wav2letter/)
null
0
1545428466
False
0
eca1elj
t3_a8eox6
null
null
t3_a8eox6
/r/programming/comments/a8eox6/facebook_opensources_a_speechrecognition_system/eca1elj/
1547905606
10
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
atxcoder03
t2_206tlemw
Just curious, did any of you who are critical of the writer learn coding when you were in elementary school? And you are a programmer now?
null
0
1544282464
False
0
ebcy05q
t3_a4ab10
null
null
t3_a4ab10
/r/programming/comments/a4ab10/im_a_developer_i_wont_teach_my_kids_to_code_and/ebcy05q/
1547346940
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
bloody-albatross
t2_cdjk3
As I understand peer dependencies is that they are for plugins. The mime type library is not a plugin to the web framework. It is just a library used by the web framework. It didn't know about the mime types of some of the files I needed to serve (I think it might have been .woff files) so I wanted to tell it about them, but when I required it I got a different instance of that library and so my additional mime types where not recognized by the web framework. It is all a long time ago, so memory is a bit hazy.
null
0
1545428756
False
0
eca1rus
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9vn1z
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca1rus/
1547905769
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Eirenarch
t2_46hjd
I see no reason why Java would prevent writing good software like the JetBrains IDEs. In fact I think it helps significantly.
null
0
1544282471
False
0
ebcy0gn
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcb2zy
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcy0gn/
1547346944
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
kukiric
t2_8y4hu
If you create an [app manifest](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Manifest) for your web app, it will work offline, and the user will be able to install it as a home screen/desktop shortcut on both mobile and desktop platforms.
null
1
1545428817
1545429336
0
eca1ul4
t3_a8cagl
null
null
t1_ec9zfeg
/r/programming/comments/a8cagl/electron_400_has_been_released_electron_blog/eca1ul4/
1547905832
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
singdawg
t2_5lqfq
I enjoyed this. Good length, good depth, good images, good lack of proselytization
null
0
1544282534
False
0
ebcy3ba
t3_a492zr
null
null
t3_a492zr
/r/programming/comments/a492zr/reverse_engineering_the_arm1_ancestor_of_the/ebcy3ba/
1547346979
8
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
gasolinewaltz
t2_7l5zh
Honestly it's not all that bad, in my purely anecdotal experience they're the vocal minority. Good companies know how to filter these people out or into junior roles. I mostly work in enterprise though, I would imagine it's different in the startup scene.
null
0
1545429071
False
0
eca2615
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_eca122v
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca2615/
1547905974
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
zealotassasin
t2_9dhgr
This happens at my current company, usually because specific types of requests are more expensive (in terms of latency) than others. And in our case, the more traffic we receive there's a much higher proportion of "cheap" requests than "expensive" requests. We rarely even look at the mean anymore. We seem to have gotten more information from starting at the 99th percentile.
null
0
1544282630
False
0
ebcy7td
t3_a3ldxe
null
null
t3_a3ldxe
/r/programming/comments/a3ldxe/the_response_time_paradox_how_services_can/ebcy7td/
1547347034
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
WallStProg
t2_tujdj
At one point he says "Make sure your OS is tuned". That's a lot easier said than done -- anyone know of any tools that help verify that an OS/machine is running "well". For instance, we've recently been scratching our heads over performance issues on some new machines until someone on our team found that some of the drives needed firmware updates to fix performance problems. It would be nice to have a set of canned tests that we could run on new machines to show up these kinds of problems early.
null
0
1545429175
False
0
eca2ama
t3_a8aels
null
null
t3_a8aels
/r/programming/comments/a8aels/how_low_can_you_go_ultra_low_latency_java_in_the/eca2ama/
1547906031
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Aeon_Mortuum
t2_j5t1a
"But it worked fast on *my* machine!" says Google Android developer with 128GB of RAM and a supercomputer
null
0
1544282711
False
0
ebcybj7
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcl4zx
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcybj7/
1547347080
37
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
muffinheart
t2_485za
They do. All my team's code is hosted on git. There's no node_modules folder on there. Every time someone pulls down the repo fresh it all installs from npm. We use Yarn though which keeps track of dependencies with a lock file but I do believe this is built into NodeJS now as well.
null
0
1545429219
False
0
eca2cn9
t3_a89y3r
null
null
t1_ec9ss9r
/r/programming/comments/a89y3r/the_node_modules_problem/eca2cn9/
1547906056
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
mdatwood
t2_h5qqe
Consistency is a cornerstone in UX/UI design. Users shouldn't have to learn a new method to copy and paste for every program they use. Users have a hard enough time learning the particulars of any given software, they should not also have to relearn the basics that should be consistent. There are literally books written around this premise like "Don't Make Me Think".
null
0
1544282727
False
0
ebcyca9
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebbzd7y
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcyca9/
1547347089
4
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
jephthai
t2_591d
Everything by Munificent Bob is fantastic. I've learned a lot from him. I've been working on a couple programming language projects for the last few years, and his material has been pretty handy sometimes.
null
0
1545429247
False
0
eca2dx0
t3_a8an2s
null
null
t1_ec9k06w
/r/programming/comments/a8an2s/crafting_interpreters_how_to_build_a_hash_table/eca2dx0/
1547906072
23
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
idobai
t2_fu8kq
I used vscode and it's too bloated for an editor and too dumb to be an IDE - it has the same story as atom. Vscode handling large projects and large files? LoL it can barely handle small files without wasting hundreds of MBs of RAM and having awful latency(maybe you get used to it after shitty electron apps). Also, what it can do is limited by the external stuff from the current ecosystem. If there's a completion/debugging/refactoring tool for a language then I can integrate those into vim, emacs etc. too.
null
1
1544282733
False
0
ebcycjy
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebctxuk
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcycjy/
1547347093
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
stupodwebsote
t2_16iquzue
Crockford loves Qt for some reason
null
0
1545429355
False
0
eca2ixz
t3_a8cagl
null
null
t1_ec9rnsr
/r/programming/comments/a8cagl/electron_400_has_been_released_electron_blog/eca2ixz/
1547906134
1
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
CheezyXenomorph
t2_hr82u
I use the jetbrains IDEs a lot, if I don't have phpstorm open i have goland or rider, frequently multiple projects or multiple languages. They're java based, each runs its own JVM and use a non-native UI framework. They are not known to be resource friendly (but functionally they're amazing) Despite this, what's the most resource intensive program I run at work? The electron based rocketchat client we use. It's stupid how badly performing it is, and our work machines are beasts.
null
0
1544282747
False
0
ebcyd7o
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcik9e
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcyd7o/
1547347101
27
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
jephthai
t2_591d
An assoc is in a way a hyperstatic dictionary, where previous states can be preserved. So if you have interrelated content in your assoc, you could in principle do some really interesting things. It does pay a high linear-search cost, though, as you point out. I've had thoughts about building a Forth interpreter in Lisp using an association list as the dictionary because it's shaped almost the same as Forth's hyperstatic global environment.
null
0
1545429438
False
0
eca2mnt
t3_a8an2s
null
null
t1_ec9r98e
/r/programming/comments/a8an2s/crafting_interpreters_how_to_build_a_hash_table/eca2mnt/
1547906180
2
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
idobai
t2_fu8kq
Webshit logic: if it has a dark theme as the default and if it's trying to do something "native" devs don't care about/already solved then it's better.
null
0
1544282889
False
0
ebcyjm8
t3_a45jvw
null
null
t1_ebcu3nl
/r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebcyjm8/
1547347209
12
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
relaychatapp
t2_21t8bb38
Rails, yikes.
null
1
1545429576
False
0
eca2su1
t3_a8elod
null
null
t3_a8elod
/r/programming/comments/a8elod/kubernetes_on_rails/eca2su1/
1547906256
0
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
rlbond86
t2_436ic
Except D is garbage collected
null
1
1544282960
False
0
ebcymti
t3_a47s2x
null
null
t1_ebcuuef
/r/programming/comments/a47s2x/happy_17th_birthday_d/ebcymti/
1547347249
9
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null
False
Tijdreiziger
t2_zhdgd
Yes, you could call it a virtual machine, but it's more akin to the JVM than what most people think about when you say 'Ubuntu virtual machine'.
null
0
1545429608
False
0
eca2u69
t3_a7rdpt
null
null
t1_ec9wapa
/r/programming/comments/a7rdpt/microsoft_unveils_windows_sandbox_run_any_app_in/eca2u69/
1547906272
3
t5_2fwo
r/programming
public
null