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False | AForAlternative | t2_9xeck | That's definitely true, although I think that its important for beginners to have access to extended functionality once they do graduate from the early learning phase. I think VS Code is almost perfect in this regard, since on its own it doesn't have too much in the way of other functionality. Sublime Text is definitely more minimal, but personally I've had problems with the extension ecosystem and getting things to work just right. | null | 0 | 1544411175 | False | 0 | ebh2ipf | t3_a4p9dy | null | null | t1_ebgzcdp | /r/programming/comments/a4p9dy/choosing_a_text_editor_an_important_decision/ebh2ipf/ | 1547416389 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | sinedpick | t2_ksuu9 | > I'd support them with a subscription
Sure, but if you have to make a podcast and you're told that you have to sell it directly, you know you're fucked. | null | 0 | 1545602234 | False | 0 | ecf1khi | t3_a8o8ot | null | null | t1_ecd4kxg | /r/programming/comments/a8o8ot/designing_an_adblocker_for_radio_and_podcasts/ecf1khi/ | 1547989915 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | whozurdaddy | t2_3ao1y | great. what new command line options do i need to learn now. | null | 0 | 1544411198 | False | 0 | ebh2jl8 | t3_a4oi4w | null | null | t3_a4oi4w | /r/programming/comments/a4oi4w/git_v2200_released/ebh2jl8/ | 1547416399 | -16 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | the--dud | t2_6l9v9 | I don't know this but I suspect that some of the equipment they use is insanely expensive. In the latest video they use some electronic-thingie-mabob that can analyse and record the memory operations - I suspect that is some astronomically expensive lab equipment!
| null | 0 | 1545602240 | False | 0 | ecf1kth | t3_a8tmd0 | null | null | t1_ece06me | /r/programming/comments/a8tmd0/apollo_guidance_computer_restoring_the_computer/ecf1kth/ | 1547989920 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lyth | t2_4gtur | I’m not sure we max out at 115k in Toronto. Though i’ll Admit it’s on the high end. | null | 0 | 1544411211 | False | 0 | ebh2k22 | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgn903 | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh2k22/ | 1547416405 | 11 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | sinedpick | t2_ksuu9 | Just a heads up if english isn't your first language. This isn't a "simulation," but rather a rendering. | null | 0 | 1545602298 | False | 0 | ecf1nvv | t3_a8y997 | null | null | t3_a8y997 | /r/programming/comments/a8y997/mandelbrot_simulation/ecf1nvv/ | 1547989958 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dobkeratops | t2_bb9fa | right I seem to remember something about that, and a later atari console chipset was also more heavily driven by a raster display list (a certain number of sprites per line, reset by the 'beam-chasing'/'proto-amiga-copper' chip.
| null | 0 | 1544411278 | False | 0 | ebh2mjx | t3_a44xl7 | null | null | t1_ebgklhb | /r/programming/comments/a44xl7/flatline_how_the_amiga_languished/ebh2mjx/ | 1547416435 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | cowinabadplace | t2_3xj24 | Interesting. The approach makes sense. Some part of the functionality is provided by management tools like Github or Gitlab. For instance, you don't need the branches to be in place because Github/Gitlab merges can refer to a Pull Request and the context is all there.
| null | 0 | 1545602352 | False | 0 | ecf1qpq | t3_a8y0uk | null | null | t3_a8y0uk | /r/programming/comments/a8y0uk/cross_post_rebase_workflow_vs_merge_workflow/ecf1qpq/ | 1547989993 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | zp30 | t2_5oh99y | No. I just turned down an offer from a hedge fund, took a pay cut and going to start working at a small company with much more interesting work to me. The pay is still decent, enough to let me enjoy life and definitely worth sparing me from working on stuff I’m not passionate about, the better team and culture and work-life balance than I’d get at a hedge fund. Not everything is about money. | null | 0 | 1544411309 | False | 0 | ebh2npz | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgg4j6 | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh2npz/ | 1547416450 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lorarc | t2_zlcgl | Go is not PHP. PHP gives you an easy way to do a lot of bad things, usually these things are made as quick and dirty hacks to fix a mess by piling more shitty code on top of that mess. And to be honest I loved that about PHP because it was usually the case that I had not enough time to do a lot of fixes.
​
But PHP applications were horrible once they grew into a serious application and I'd rather not start big projects in it. | null | 0 | 1545602409 | False | 0 | ecf1tql | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ece80rr | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf1tql/ | 1547990030 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bioemerl | t2_5kvak | I agree there | null | 0 | 1544411416 | False | 0 | ebh2rpg | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgxhgg | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh2rpg/ | 1547416499 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | tehjimmeh | t2_49ft0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iSmkqocn0oQ | null | 0 | 1545602432 | False | 0 | ecf1uyu | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_eceanoi | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf1uyu/ | 1547990046 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | eyal0 | t2_32z87 | The VC are in America because that's where all the money is. All the money is there because that is where it's easiest to exploit workers and not provide them any benefits. | null | 0 | 1544411468 | False | 0 | ebh2toj | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebg0loe | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh2toj/ | 1547416524 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | perlgeek | t2_385ap | C#, Elixir, Julia would be candidates I'd look into. | null | 0 | 1545602524 | False | 0 | ecf201q | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecepjqc | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf201q/ | 1547990108 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | aullik | t2_duui5 | code bullet is a fun channel. He won't teach you something about programing (maybe about ai) but he is certainly entertaining and might get you to research one or the other topic to greater detail. | null | 0 | 1544411509 | 1544413051 | 0 | ebh2vbo | t3_a4rep1 | null | null | t3_a4rep1 | /r/programming/comments/a4rep1/interesting_channel/ebh2vbo/ | 1547416544 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Thaxll | t2_59gtn | Because:
- you get shit done in Go
- the STD lib is really good
- concurrency / parallelism is good
- the best language for cross compiling
- a lot of libraries for a young language
- good support from the community
- tooling is excellent ( benchmark / test / compiling / formatting/ doc )
- supported by many third parties for APIs
- fast enough for most common use cases
- great IDE support ( vs code )
- easy to on board people on a new project
- easy to read code ( try yourself and read the std lib )
- very stable language ( backward compatible between versions )
- good documentation
- fast compilation
- no hidden magic
And most of the cons that people complain about ( error, generics, packaging ) are partially addressed / worked on. Go is not perfect but it's really not a bad language. | null | 0 | 1545602622 | 1545602869 | 0 | ecf25a6 | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecdn9zp | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf25a6/ | 1547990173 | 13 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | eyal0 | t2_32z87 | Tel Aviv is probably the best high tech city you could choose outside of the USA. | null | 1 | 1544411533 | False | 0 | ebh2w9c | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebg66ld | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh2w9c/ | 1547416555 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | exorxor | t2_h57gcb9 | Regarding your code of conduct, please go fuck yourself. | null | 1 | 1545602625 | False | 0 | ecf25f7 | t3_a8xl5o | null | null | t3_a8xl5o | /r/programming/comments/a8xl5o/i_decided_to_build_my_own_sip_server_and_i_think/ecf25f7/ | 1547990175 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | meneldal2 | t2_l7gg5 | Amazon print of demand is awfully expensive and isn't even that great.
If you print 100+ copies, you can likely bring the cost to $20-$25 per book if you are willing to have it printed in China. They do a good job, you just have some delay for the shipping. With more you can go below $20 most likely.
With Kickstarter fees and shipping costs, 40 euros should be enough for a much nicer profit and more affordable for customers (and they can get the pdf as well while Amazon gives you only physical). | null | 0 | 1544411633 | False | 0 | ebh3009 | t3_a4m0rb | null | null | t1_ebg9chq | /r/programming/comments/a4m0rb/game_engine_black_book_doom/ebh3009/ | 1547416602 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | I think most people are unhappy about me posting this because this guy was a severely schizophrenic programmer, who believed he could talk to god through is OS, and who jumped in front of a train a few months ago.
Edit: Oh yeah, and he was also quite racist because of his schizophrenia, which put some people off. | null | 1 | 1545602651 | 1545756275 | 0 | ecf26sz | t3_a8vd2a | null | null | t1_ecezehm | /r/programming/comments/a8vd2a/templeos_programmer_terry_davis_demonstrating_why/ecf26sz/ | 1547990192 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | The_Grubgrub | t2_gpcrm | > 401k AND pension. I would say I have an average job.
From what I've seen a pension isn't average, but it might possible you're in the government sector? I assume they're much more popular there than in private companies. | null | 0 | 1544411739 | False | 0 | ebh344i | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgjaiz | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh344i/ | 1547416652 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | sanderspedro | t2_z77q8 | Hehehe you speak my language! | null | 1 | 1545602859 | False | 0 | ecf2hrb | t3_a8xl5o | null | null | t1_ecf25f7 | /r/programming/comments/a8xl5o/i_decided_to_build_my_own_sip_server_and_i_think/ecf2hrb/ | 1547990327 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Eirenarch | t2_46hjd | So even bigger difference :) | null | 0 | 1544411746 | False | 0 | ebh34f6 | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgyla6 | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh34f6/ | 1547416656 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | c-smile | t2_ue34p | sciter.node application is simply this:
const Sciter = require("sciter");
var mainWindow = new Sciter.View();
mainWindow.loadFile("path-to.html");
mainWindow.show();
Sciter.run();
Where "path-to" will use the same structure as any typical front end application. Each framework like Angular, React, Vue, etc. has its own requirements to folder/app structure.
And npm shall just work as it has nothing UI specific, and sciter.node is just a node.
Is this what you meant?
| null | 0 | 1545602927 | False | 0 | ecf2lcf | t3_a8vkzm | null | null | t1_eceyzfa | /r/programming/comments/a8vkzm/sciternode_as_an_alternative_to_electron/ecf2lcf/ | 1547990371 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | KillianDrake | t2_kxibfg4 | Don't be silly, he's not wasting all that time and effort for nothing. | null | 0 | 1544411813 | False | 0 | ebh36t5 | t3_a4m0rb | null | null | t1_ebh2bt0 | /r/programming/comments/a4m0rb/game_engine_black_book_doom/ebh36t5/ | 1547416685 | -16 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | nikomaru | t2_at4e5 | Alright, then. How's aboot Zork? | null | 0 | 1545602993 | False | 0 | ecf2oul | t3_a8tmd0 | null | null | t1_ece78g8 | /r/programming/comments/a8tmd0/apollo_guidance_computer_restoring_the_computer/ecf2oul/ | 1547990444 | 9 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | v_krishna | t2_3mps3 | Also very few devs in the bay area hit that $300k mark without getting into management or getting in with a handful of companies where stock is actually currently valuable (i.e., where you could count equity as actual compensation) | null | 0 | 1544411813 | False | 0 | ebh36to | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebh1r3o | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh36to/ | 1547416685 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Str4yfromthep4th | t2_1650jz | "there's no such thing as too much docs".
You can have too much of anything. When people say you can never have too much documentation they aren't being literal.
Knowing when commenting is necessary is key. This is part of what makes a good programmer.
You need as many HELPFUL comments as necessary to empower the reader to understand the code without actually reading it. That's it. That's the point.
Your goal is to prevent unnecessary time loss in the future by spending a comparatively small amount in the present.
If the time you spend commenting exceeds the time users save in the future then it's a loss.
Spending 15 minutes writing a massive book of comments for something that is intuitive or self explanatory is obviously a waste of time. | null | 0 | 1545603111 | False | 0 | ecf2uzh | t3_a8iw6b | null | null | t1_ecf0qu6 | /r/programming/comments/a8iw6b/ten_simple_rules_for_documenting_scientific/ecf2uzh/ | 1547990520 | -2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jeezfrk | t2_338z8 | > This theorem holds unchanged (and with the same proofs) even for models that always terminate and so aren't prone to the "classical" halting problem (such as so-called "total languages").
But a lower-bound on non-decidability does exist: too few states to matter. The efficiency for analyzing an FSM is actually not that hard because there's not an exponential number of states! More to the point, that's a very very common case in real world situations and modules! I also have no idea how an FSM could somehow be 'undecidable' and a pushdown transducer is somehow simpler?
We shouldn't be so voodoo about solving regex / state machines. It isn't NP-hard nor even exponential-in-limit to determine the 'solution' to many many cases (sub-parts of a program).
Why? If the unconstrained loop-stats are few or none. That means the number of states has a maximum polynomial-degree (and far often less) with the number of instructions. If you don't have that many states ... your 'brute force' decidability of halting-in-N-instructions is simply something you could accidentally reach.
Without much trying. | null | 0 | 1544411841 | False | 0 | ebh37ux | t3_a4m2dp | null | null | t1_ebgg0s4 | /r/programming/comments/a4m2dp/limits_of_programming_by_interface/ebh37ux/ | 1547416699 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Hero_Of_Shadows | t2_13fjr0 | I meant for example to get an installer for windows from a sciter application, if that process can be streamlined it would help with the sciter pitch. | null | 0 | 1545603113 | False | 0 | ecf2v2d | t3_a8vkzm | null | null | t1_ecf2lcf | /r/programming/comments/a8vkzm/sciternode_as_an_alternative_to_electron/ecf2v2d/ | 1547990521 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [removed] | null | 0 | 1544411854 | False | 0 | ebh38bk | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebfz4uk | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh38bk/ | 1547416704 | -1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Michaelmrose | t2_8yohe | Post numbers then? | null | 0 | 1545603116 | False | 0 | ecf2v8g | t3_a8rk6u | null | null | t1_ecdxw6q | /r/programming/comments/a8rk6u/librefox_mainstream_firefox_with_a_better_privacy/ecf2v8g/ | 1547990523 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | The_Grubgrub | t2_gpcrm | Lol I was about to say. 120k at google sounds like an intern. | null | 0 | 1544411859 | False | 0 | ebh38ju | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgyla6 | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh38ju/ | 1547416707 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Michaelmrose | t2_8yohe | His ass. | null | 0 | 1545603135 | False | 0 | ecf2w72 | t3_a8rk6u | null | null | t1_eceh52j | /r/programming/comments/a8rk6u/librefox_mainstream_firefox_with_a_better_privacy/ecf2w72/ | 1547990535 | 9 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | JGailor | t2_2essw | In the US, a company offering health benefits doesn’t mean those benefits are fully paid by the company. It is often still quite expensive (hundreds of dollars a month) even after your employer pays a portion of it. | null | 0 | 1544411889 | False | 0 | ebh39o9 | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgtxnt | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh39o9/ | 1547416720 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | foomprekov | t2_5hh96 | My stance is simpler: all the production go code I have ever seen made me groan. | null | 0 | 1545603185 | False | 0 | ecf2ys4 | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t3_a8rptf | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf2ys4/ | 1547990567 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | red_mike | t2_fwid4yl | This is me right now. Granted I'm at the start of my career, and I'm working for a small startup.
I don't personally mind my work situation, because it's a comfortable environment where I get paid to learn. And I know that my pay grade will be scaling up exponentially over a short period of time.
I'm more concerned with people outside our industry, who will most likely be made increasingly redudant in the coming years due to automation. | null | 0 | 1544411891 | False | 0 | ebh39rp | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebfz4uk | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh39rp/ | 1547416721 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | masklinn | t2_d5sb | > I also heard they have bizarre restrictions on lambdas? Not sure why.
There's only one pretty straightforward limitation: lambdas can only contain an expression. However since Python is a pretty statements-heavy language, that means much of the language is off-limit. | null | 0 | 1545603338 | False | 0 | ecf364y | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_eceanoi | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf364y/ | 1547990657 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Eirenarch | t2_46hjd | Yeah, you exploit workers by paying the highest wages in the world. Got it! | null | 0 | 1544411899 | False | 0 | ebh3a2j | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebh2toj | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh3a2j/ | 1547416725 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | cheald | t2_35l7m | Go enjoys significant prominence in modern infrastructure tooling. k8s, docker, all of hashicorp's stuff (consul, terraform, vault), etcd, coredns, trefik, telegraf, filebeat, prometheus - all Go. Most modern cloud based architectures are heavily dependent on a significant chunk of that list. It's fair to say it's become dominant in the space.
To put it another way, you really should learn go if you want to be a devops engineer today. That may not hold in the future, but that's definitely where it's at today. | null | 0 | 1545603372 | 1545604366 | 0 | ecf37u2 | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ece3k9g | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf37u2/ | 1547990678 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | MrMariohead | t2_as647 | I work from home remotely, but visit the office a handful of times per year. I am far more productive when I'm at home than when I'm in the office. | null | 0 | 1544411963 | False | 0 | ebh3cku | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebge05i | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh3cku/ | 1547416757 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | masklinn | t2_d5sb | Elixir isn't at all close to the metal. | null | 0 | 1545603389 | False | 0 | ecf38po | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecf201q | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf38po/ | 1547990689 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Styx_ | t2_86byd | I mostly agree with you but our product includes a video conferencing application and that's how we handle anything that needs to be "face to face" so the difference is even slimmer. The app's got screensharing via a chrome plugin as well, so we miss out on approximately nothing compared to actually sharing the same physical space.
I think it's _possible_ for physical proximity to be a _major_ advantage in relation to remote communication. But I also think these cases are few and far between and depend on the actual devs involved. Yeah, if you've both got 10+ years in the industry and you're working on something cutting edge and you need the ability to "mind meld" with the other person you're talking to, then physical proximity is huge. But if you're junior dev with a bunch of other junior devs fresh out of college and a bunch of tired senior devs that just want to put in their 8 hours and go home, then physical proximity isn't going to do anything but deplete everyone's patience just a tad bit more. | null | 0 | 1544411965 | False | 0 | ebh3co3 | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgx1gj | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh3co3/ | 1547416758 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | masklinn | t2_d5sb | > I understand why Pike is opinionated. If he gave everybody what they want, they would have a faster horse.
That really can't be used for Go since it's not an innovation (or even a use of previously research-bound features à la dependent types or whatever). It was released as a 20 years back-step. | null | 0 | 1545603528 | False | 0 | ecf3fwj | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecdxony | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf3fwj/ | 1547990779 | 17 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jeezfrk | t2_338z8 | Yes there is. Polynomial-per-state is pretty simply lower than exponential. It simply doesn't get covered by the Godel-Incompleteness theorem.
Godel (and writing an 'analyzer' into the 'analyzed' program) is the only reason the halting problem is a firm limit. | null | 0 | 1544412055 | False | 0 | ebh3g0z | t3_a4m2dp | null | null | t1_ebgyo2c | /r/programming/comments/a4m2dp/limits_of_programming_by_interface/ebh3g0z/ | 1547416830 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | masklinn | t2_d5sb | > It’s because there is no inheritance at all in Go. Rather, it uses composition
That doesn't follow. Exhibit 1: Haskell.
> Instead of declaring that your struct implements an interface, and then filling out the implementation, you fill out the implementation in order to follow the interface.
Except you don't do that, you may just have a name collision which makes the struct conform to the interface.
Also exhibit 2: still haskell, which separates the interface (typeclass), the implementation (functions working on the type itself) and the implementation of the interface (instance of the typeclass). | null | 0 | 1545603678 | 1545656765 | 0 | ecf3nje | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ece49c8 | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf3nje/ | 1547990873 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | danieltheg | t2_5mrwm | Yeah absolutely. I think most devs in the Bay Area can realistically expect to get to $140k or so but those huge salaries are just at the big name public companies. | null | 0 | 1544412082 | False | 0 | ebh3h1v | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebh36to | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh3h1v/ | 1547416843 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | WalterBright | t2_1zosa | [ya sure you betcha](https://dlang.org/articles/code_coverage.html) | null | 0 | 1545603742 | False | 0 | ecf3qud | t3_a8p1m1 | null | null | t1_eceewsx | /r/programming/comments/a8p1m1/the_myth_of_100_code_coverage/ecf3qud/ | 1547990914 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | pron98 | t2_f0thb | What is the algorithm? | null | 0 | 1544412137 | False | 0 | ebh3j6e | t3_a4m2dp | null | null | t1_ebh3g0z | /r/programming/comments/a4m2dp/limits_of_programming_by_interface/ebh3j6e/ | 1547416869 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | s73v3r | t2_3c7qc | You're entirely wrong, and your worldview that people cannot be polite unless they're faking it, and that those who aren't are not "fully expressing themselves" is quite sad. | null | 0 | 1545603783 | False | 0 | ecf3sty | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecec9td | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf3sty/ | 1547990938 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | rpgFANATIC | t2_3rgeh | Had my time in 2 midwestern cities. Also saw strong markets in the Dallas metro in the south. Also considering Des Moines after hearing about some jobs there.
The tech market is strong everywhere, not just where housing prices are highest.
If you don't mind a slower lifestyle, you can easily pay off debt and retire working a boring corporate job of only 40 hrs a week. Not everywhere has to be a coast city | null | 0 | 1544412146 | False | 0 | ebh3jjg | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebg06rv | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh3jjg/ | 1547416873 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | XaliBurMc | t2_pdrnzof | the color of every pixel is calculated live, so I think it is a simulation or not? | null | 0 | 1545603896 | False | 0 | ecf3ycb | t3_a8y997 | null | null | t1_ecf1nvv | /r/programming/comments/a8y997/mandelbrot_simulation/ecf3ycb/ | 1547991035 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Tannerleaf | t2_58qlt | ...or at least until some jackass perfects an A.I. that can crush the human intellect.
At that time, the highest paid job will likely be "Post-Apocalyptic Warrior", to defend the survivors against the killbots. They will have their choice of ancient canned hotdogs, and (hopefully) fertile women.
| null | 0 | 1544412160 | False | 0 | ebh3k3q | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgtpqj | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh3k3q/ | 1547416880 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | vorlontech | t2_14jwnk | [Urbit](https://www.urbit.org) | null | 0 | 1545603952 | False | 0 | ecf416r | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecdld7o | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf416r/ | 1547991071 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | The_Grubgrub | t2_gpcrm | > Programmer pay outside of the US is low because it's a low-status job
what
>I would describe the pay and working conditions of U.S. private-sector software engineers as upper-working class at absolute best.
WAT
> It's a non-career that starts off strong but leaves you on a sandbar in middle age.
Did someone hurt you? You sound like someone who's high school bully grew up to be a software dev and you're upset that he's doing better than you in life. I was following you the first two paragraphs, but then you delve into this weird spite-rant. | null | 0 | 1544412295 | False | 0 | ebh3pgf | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgflzo | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh3pgf/ | 1547416948 | 44 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | sinedpick | t2_ksuu9 | The color of every pixel on your screen is calculated live while your computer is using your display, but that doesn't make X11 a simulation. Try to apply the dictionary definition of simulation here, and it should be clearer. Basically, you're not imitating anything because the mandelbrot set doesn't exist as something we can experience without a computer of some sort. | null | 0 | 1545604053 | False | 0 | ecf467k | t3_a8y997 | null | null | t1_ecf3ycb | /r/programming/comments/a8y997/mandelbrot_simulation/ecf467k/ | 1547991133 | 11 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | possessed_flea | t2_3auhs | After taxes it depends on a lot of factors, ( note I’ve lived in both countries )
A plumber or electrician will charge $60 to $120 just for the callout and then bill by the hour for their work. Typically though both of those fields have the bread and butter of either industrial work or new homes where they just bill weeks of 40 hours at that rate.
Generally speaking California has by far the lowest cost of living I have ever seen, and along with this the lowest taxes ( including sales tax ) .
But on the flip side of this it is the lowest quality and highest cost healthcare I have seen. ( I pay $1600 per month for health insurance, the australlian system costs a flat tax of 1.5% and is comparable to an American plan which costs 45 to 50k ( I.e. a maxed out platinum ppo) ( | null | 0 | 1544412520 | False | 0 | ebh3yct | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebh21h6 | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh3yct/ | 1547417057 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | fnordstar | t2_8xyuf | Why would you use something HTML based to make a desktop application? Wouldn't a real GUI toolkit be much better suited? | null | 0 | 1545604281 | False | 0 | ecf4h3z | t3_a8vkzm | null | null | t3_a8vkzm | /r/programming/comments/a8vkzm/sciternode_as_an_alternative_to_electron/ecf4h3z/ | 1547991268 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | pron98 | t2_f0thb | > I have no idea how an FSM could somehow be 'undecidable' and a pushdown transducer is somehow simpler?
I didn't say undecidable. I said that deciding a non-trivial property of an FSM takes a time complexity that is linear in the number of states -- same as for a TM. However, this is not true for PDAs ([some nontrivial properties of PDAs are decidable](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deterministic_pushdown_automaton#Equivalence_problem) despite their number of states being potentially infinite). BTW, a PDA with k *internal* states is certainly no simpler than a FSM with k states, but a PDA with k internal states could have an infinite number of states overall.
> The efficiency for analyzing an FSM is actually not that hard because there's not an exponential number of states!
Exponential in what (i.e. what is the parameter)? Program size? That completely depends. You can certainly have a language that can only describe FSMs with the number of states growing exponentially in the program size. This is true even for regular expressions, and many interesting properties of regular expressions are not tractable (IIRC, equivalence is intractable).
> It isn't NP-hard nor even exponential-in-limit to determine the 'solution' to many many cases (sub-parts of a program).
That depends on what you mean by "many", but the same applies for TMs as well. The point is that you cannot deduce anything from the mere knowledge that the model is weaker than Turing-complete to make verification easier. Here's how you can convince yourself of that: Every program can be trivially and mechanically translated into an FSM by adding a large counter (say 2^1000 ) to all loops/recursive calls, without changing the program's meaning in practice. This means that if the mere knowledge that something is a FSM could help us verify its properties faster then, *without loss of generality*, we could simply assume that of all programs. | null | 0 | 1544412568 | 1544438667 | 0 | ebh40aj | t3_a4m2dp | null | null | t1_ebh37ux | /r/programming/comments/a4m2dp/limits_of_programming_by_interface/ebh40aj/ | 1547417081 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Horehey34 | t2_fv36p | That wasn't what it was at all, it is very respectful, informative and thorough.
It doesn't even have ads. | null | 0 | 1545604368 | False | 0 | ecf4lf3 | t3_a8mjza | null | null | t1_eccjsbc | /r/programming/comments/a8mjza/templeos_down_the_rabbit_hole/ecf4lf3/ | 1547991321 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | eyal0 | t2_32z87 | https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-switch/wp/2016/06/27/how-much-uber-drivers-actually-make-per-hour/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.1c1747589720
VC exploit gig economy workers. That's easiest in America.
Uber, AirBnB, TaskRabbit, Instacart... | null | 0 | 1544412671 | False | 0 | ebh448t | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebh3a2j | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh448t/ | 1547417129 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jyper | t2_44f90 | I believe it does let you generalize over types as long as it's an interface types and not a generic type. That's not the same thing and not used in the same use cases but it is something | null | 0 | 1545604414 | False | 0 | ecf4nmm | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecdnf29 | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf4nmm/ | 1547991348 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | NoblesseNobleman | t2_dan55qm | Even if you factor cost of living in it is completely one sided. TONS of European cities are close to the rents of Silicon Valley. Even if you look at a 1000-1500$ increase in rent per month, you’re only losing another 12-17k a year. That is nowhere close to melting away a 50k vs150k difference. Working hours are only bad if you make them bad... companies only expect the typical 40 hour work week unless you want to climb the ladder faster(in which case your compensation pulls even further ahead). | null | 0 | 1544412710 | False | 0 | ebh45rd | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgud17 | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh45rd/ | 1547417148 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Horehey34 | t2_fv36p | Except it isn't bullying, it's the complete opposite. | null | 0 | 1545604441 | False | 0 | ecf4ows | t3_a8mjza | null | null | t1_eccja55 | /r/programming/comments/a8mjza/templeos_down_the_rabbit_hole/ecf4ows/ | 1547991364 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | RainmaKer770 | t2_hdg65 | I think people are severely underestimating how much top tier talent pay in India has increased in the last decade.
I've attended one of the top 3 CS colleges in India and the placements on the first day have increased from about 30k$ to 80k$ in about five years.
TLDR: Top American companies/startups are coming to India for "cheap" talent and the growth is actually insane. | null | 0 | 1544412771 | False | 0 | ebh4834 | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t3_a4n8jv | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh4834/ | 1547417177 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1545604452 | False | 0 | ecf4pgf | t3_a8tmd0 | null | null | t1_ecev61o | /r/programming/comments/a8tmd0/apollo_guidance_computer_restoring_the_computer/ecf4pgf/ | 1547991370 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jsylvis | t2_ioz3z | It's more like a welder being _really goddamn bored_ with the same weld on the same pipes, really looking forward to the next time they've got to build something challenging. | null | 0 | 1544412825 | False | 0 | ebh4a6t | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgim5g | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh4a6t/ | 1547417203 | 10 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1545604542 | 1545604843 | 0 | ecf4ttq | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecec9td | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf4ttq/ | 1547991426 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ander_bsd | t2_mrrn82w | I did the same Slack does with Pidgin/Kopete back in 2008, with even integrated video preview plugins, under 100MB. Tell that to the Electron hipsters.
But "your shitty IRC has no features". STFU kid, don't even brag about you don't know about. Between IRC and Slack, there were MSN and Jabber, and the last is still alive, with the same features depending on the client, and NOT wasting your RAM and CPU. | null | 0 | 1544413026 | False | 0 | ebh4hqx | t3_a45jvw | null | null | t1_ebcik9e | /r/programming/comments/a45jvw/electron_and_the_decline_of_native_apps/ebh4hqx/ | 1547417296 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 09f911029d7 | t2_kqdk35o | If it makes it more maintainable, then yes. If it makes it less maintainable, then no.
Who's maintaining the polyfill? Will they be maintaining it in 5 years or will it die leaving me holding the bag? Will the browsers I'm supporting in 5 years need the polyfill? What percentage of users will that be? | null | 0 | 1545604592 | False | 0 | ecf4w7z | t3_a8epbk | null | null | t1_eccm696 | /r/programming/comments/a8epbk/i_made_a_playlist_of_129_videos_on_programming/ecf4w7z/ | 1547991455 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | hasen-judy | t2_2j2as8va | No, that doesn't follow from the argument, but you seem to think this is a clever comeback.
I'm just calling it now. If this succeeds wildly, I'll admit I was wrong. | null | 0 | 1544413032 | False | 0 | ebh4hzj | t3_a4dtp2 | null | null | t1_ebelwb7 | /r/programming/comments/a4dtp2/kweb_a_new_approach_to_building_rich_webapps_in/ebh4hzj/ | 1547417299 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 09f911029d7 | t2_kqdk35o | He was the prophet and we didn't listen | null | 0 | 1545604694 | False | 0 | ecf513n | t3_a8whsc | null | null | t1_ecf1dvu | /r/programming/comments/a8whsc/templeos_down_the_rabbit_hole/ecf513n/ | 1547991515 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | KryptosFR | t2_15txl0 | Well the answer is also pretty bad in my opinion.
The original poster did not ask to bring XP support back to the main branch of git but to backport two security fixes to a version that still supports XP. Security fixes that appeared recently (not in 2016 when XP support was dropped), so the answer is really dishonest in that regard.
The mistake the OP did was to make false assumptions and start a Linux vs Windows fight, where really just asking nicely might have worked. | null | 0 | 1544413047 | False | 0 | ebh4il0 | t3_a4oi4w | null | null | t1_ebgwy5v | /r/programming/comments/a4oi4w/git_v2200_released/ebh4il0/ | 1547417306 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 09f911029d7 | t2_kqdk35o | Do you glow in the dark? | null | 0 | 1545604715 | False | 0 | ecf522h | t3_a8whsc | null | null | t1_ecezqsy | /r/programming/comments/a8whsc/templeos_down_the_rabbit_hole/ecf522h/ | 1547991527 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1544413052 | False | 0 | ebh4irk | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgflzo | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh4irk/ | 1547417308 | -1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | crabmusket | t2_1fztix5 | > please timestamp blog posts, at least the month and year
A thousand times this! | null | 0 | 1545604720 | False | 0 | ecf52af | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecd7j4v | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf52af/ | 1547991530 | 12 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 17892345978235 | t2_2r7hd4wo | >What exactly do you think a high status, rewarding job is if not software engineering?
The problem is that in theory, software engineering can be high status if we are talking about creative, intelligent people having the autonomy to do creative and intelligent things, but that is not what software engineering is for 99% of people. The whole idea of corporations is to "scale" their human resources, and that means turning software engineers into simple cogs in a machine.
This means that being creative and intelligent is the worst possible thing as a software engineer. Instead of sitting around coming up with creative solutions to problems, you are taking a ticket from JIRA, making the feature it says to make, and then closing the ticket. If you are creative and intelligent, you will soon burn out and become disenfranchised.
The "user story" has baked into it all kinds of design decisions that the business analyst or whatever cog passed you the user story has decided for themselves without really having the knowledge to make those decisions. The user story itself ignores the bigger picture of the software, and the end result is software that looks like JIRA itself, a big load of features piled on top of each other in a meaningless fashion. | null | 0 | 1544413060 | False | 0 | ebh4j2x | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgiubh | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh4j2x/ | 1547417313 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | _3442 | t2_pc3x8p2 | * | null | 0 | 1545604849 | False | 0 | ecf58fj | t3_a8tmd0 | null | null | t1_eceqaws | /r/programming/comments/a8tmd0/apollo_guidance_computer_restoring_the_computer/ecf58fj/ | 1547991634 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1544413080 | False | 0 | ebh4jtq | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgo7rt | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh4jtq/ | 1547417321 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | sabas123 | t2_by3ez | > Isn't that kind of basic, though?
Depends, I doubt that anybody who has no clue idea about how memory/cachelines would come up with this point.
> And I may argue that it's still going to be very language specific
It might, but I remember it being the case for some major general purpose languages like c# which I think warrants that this kind of knowlegde is (or should be) wide spread.
| null | 0 | 1545604923 | False | 0 | ecf5bya | t3_a8kwg9 | null | null | t1_ecf03y4 | /r/programming/comments/a8kwg9/what_every_programmer_should_know_about_memory/ecf5bya/ | 1547991678 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ThePantsParty | t2_2flrj | You paid 300k in rent to be there, sure, but how much higher was your salary than what you'd make elsewhere? I make ~100k/year more than what I would make somewhere with a lower cost of living, so even if I had to pay 300k *more*, not just 300k total over 18 years, why would I ever not take that deal? I'm gonna balk at paying 300k to come out 1.8 million ahead? Never. | null | 0 | 1544413303 | False | 0 | ebh4tba | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebg4eie | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh4tba/ | 1547417466 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | errrrgh | t2_jogu6 | Dennis Ritchie > Terry Davis
All the innovation, minus the n words
Fight me | null | 0 | 1545605032 | False | 0 | ecf5h2n | t3_a8mjza | null | null | t3_a8mjza | /r/programming/comments/a8mjza/templeos_down_the_rabbit_hole/ecf5h2n/ | 1547991742 | -11 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | riemannrocker | t2_5bj0n | Considering that a mortgage payment for a modest house in the regions of the US with top software jobs is easily more than the cost of 500 over-priced avocado toasts, I don't think toast is the real problem. | null | 0 | 1544413327 | False | 0 | ebh4u9y | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgqbhf | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh4u9y/ | 1547417479 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | fungussa | t2_3wv64 | But it's the wise choice, because crappy languages like Rust don't pay much in the marketplace and Rust is languishing. Go is only a year older than Rust, yet Go is now in the top 10, and Rust, well Rust is not even on the horizon. https://www.benfrederickson.com/images/github/language-popularity/newthing.png
Just remember that shiny sparkly language features are merely a distraction from good, disciplined engineering.
| null | 0 | 1545605142 | False | 0 | ecf5mbe | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecdlsaa | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf5mbe/ | 1547991807 | -7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | goomyman | t2_3fopc | Cost savings plus communication actually is important.
You personally may be more productive in an office or at home but as a team an open office is more productive. | null | 1 | 1544413352 | False | 0 | ebh4v8w | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgjf97 | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh4v8w/ | 1547417490 | -3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | flying-sheep | t2_5jc4c | It's much more ergonomic now than a year ago. I don't really run into things anymore that slow me down | null | 0 | 1545605148 | False | 0 | ecf5mly | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_eceo516 | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf5mly/ | 1547991810 | 19 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | goomyman | t2_3fopc | Even the fancy tech is just a series of internal crud tools.
I worked on AzureStack. Turns out it’s building tens of thousands of power shell scripts on top of existing azure tech and fancy crud APIs for admins | null | 0 | 1544413490 | False | 0 | ebh50je | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgj6ff | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh50je/ | 1547417556 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | eyal0 | t2_32z87 | Google's bigger than Instagram and they saw need for something to replace python.
When I said python for enterprise, what I meant is not the scale of the number of users but the number of developers. Python is great when your team is super small, like two people. I think that people are figuring this out and moving away from python for big projects. | null | 0 | 1545605170 | False | 0 | ecf5nlr | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ece289s | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf5nlr/ | 1547991822 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | tjsr | t2_a559y | "We can't afford that!"
This was in the gaming industry, hiring for a Technical Lead in Software Engineering for QA.
I got a bit of a laugh out of that actually :) | null | 0 | 1544413501 | False | 0 | ebh50zl | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebh29zw | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh50zl/ | 1547417561 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ElvishJerricco | t2_5a5e9 | A custom language was chosen in order to ensure the reproducibility of packages, plus a number of purpose built language features that are really important. Lua wouldn't be a good fit. | null | 0 | 1545605251 | False | 0 | ecf5rcc | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecepasw | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf5rcc/ | 1547991869 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ThePantsParty | t2_2flrj | > many will say they get company provided health care, but they almost certainly will still go bankrupt or owe many many thousands of dollars if they have a catastrophic medical event
That is literally not true. Insurance covers everything above the deductible. And most tech jobs have at least 20 vacation days (in addition to federal holidays), but many have gone to unlimited time off. Trying to argue that this stuff is somehow a reasonable trade off for making 100k less (especially when most of it isn't even accurate) is ridiculous. | null | 0 | 1544413554 | False | 0 | ebh52yz | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebg9x5x | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh52yz/ | 1547417585 | 12 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | FG_Regulus | t2_aybf9 | That's not how division is defined, though. The result of division by zero (in an ordinary arithmetic sense) at it's core doesn't make sense and is *obviously* a bug if requested. | null | 0 | 1545605308 | False | 0 | ecf5u01 | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_eceyk3q | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf5u01/ | 1547991901 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | e-couch | t2_m0qs8 | I live in Fort Worth. Make >$150k as a systems architect. My new 3000 sq ft home cost me less than 150k. What is a similar new home in the Bay Area? | null | 0 | 1544413599 | False | 0 | ebh54ki | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebh1r3o | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh54ki/ | 1547417606 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | wikwikwik | t2_2rjyrp4o | OK, but how many enterprises have as many programmers as google? Why even worry until you hit 1,000 programmers or about 1/10th of what google has. (Is that number correct?)
By the way, I'm told on the rumor mill that youtube's still mostly Python.
| null | 0 | 1545605520 | 1545605747 | 0 | ecf644r | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecf5nlr | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf644r/ | 1547992026 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | goomyman | t2_3fopc | I hope your referring to hardware load balancers.
99% of APIs should have a software load balancer for uptime and redundancy. | null | 0 | 1544413605 | False | 0 | ebh54tg | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgkmzf | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh54tg/ | 1547417609 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ElvishJerricco | t2_5a5e9 | Yea. The APIs in nixpkgs are horribly underdocumented. You pretty much just have to learn to find the source code of stuff and read that to figure out how to do things | null | 0 | 1545605521 | False | 0 | ecf646s | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecex07w | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf646s/ | 1547992026 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | test6554 | t2_3cyya | America has more demand for software developers than supply. Remember, nothing affects price other than its effect on supply and/or demand. | null | 0 | 1544413715 | 1544414571 | 0 | ebh58v0 | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgs3cj | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh58v0/ | 1547417659 | 37 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | James_Mamsy | t2_z53wj | It’s still available too! We used it to explain the concept to a few friends the other day. Loved the idea so much they downloaded it too to see all the other settings available (though I’m pretty sure they just used it for an acid trip) | null | 0 | 1545605819 | False | 0 | ecf6hsr | t3_a8y997 | null | null | t1_ecewmlf | /r/programming/comments/a8y997/mandelbrot_simulation/ecf6hsr/ | 1547992224 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bioemerl | t2_5kvak | I know, it's a joke | null | 0 | 1544413820 | False | 0 | ebh5cuj | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebh4u9y | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebh5cuj/ | 1547417708 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | OneWingedShark | t2_bx7wh | >My observation is that even relatively unskilled developers have been able to become productive in the language quickly; while not complicating existing software.
Except you can have this property [in a language with exceptions and generics](https://www.reddit.com/r/ada/comments/a62y4o/success_with_introducing_ada_to_three_college/), right now. | null | 0 | 1545605840 | False | 0 | ecf6ipk | t3_a8rptf | null | null | t1_ecd4klv | /r/programming/comments/a8rptf/i_do_not_like_go/ecf6ipk/ | 1547992236 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
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