archived stringclasses 2 values | author stringlengths 3 20 | author_fullname stringlengths 4 12 ⌀ | body stringlengths 0 22.5k | comment_type stringclasses 1 value | controversiality stringclasses 2 values | created_utc stringlengths 10 10 | edited stringlengths 4 12 | gilded stringclasses 7 values | id stringlengths 1 7 | link_id stringlengths 7 10 | locked stringclasses 2 values | name stringlengths 4 10 ⌀ | parent_id stringlengths 5 10 | permalink stringlengths 41 91 ⌀ | retrieved_on stringlengths 10 10 ⌀ | score stringlengths 1 4 | subreddit_id stringclasses 1 value | subreddit_name_prefixed stringclasses 1 value | subreddit_type stringclasses 1 value | total_awards_received stringclasses 19 values |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
False | lbkulinski | t2_17799v | What if you need four backticks in your `String`?
You see where I am going with this... Using any number of backticks as your delimiter can be helpful. | null | 0 | 1544561775 | False | 0 | ebl5h3c | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl5c1w | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl5h3c/ | 1547486310 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | b33j0r | t2_52wm | Wait, your own name kinda even sounds like the open source alternative “Alexa” 😛 Cool tech! | null | 0 | 1545839544 | False | 0 | eclarxt | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_ecl52z6 | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclarxt/ | 1548095241 | 13 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | igouy | t2_6sj2 | > Dart is obviously more performant than Python. Suspect more than Java. C, C++, Rust, and Go maybe not.
*fwiw* https://benchmarksgame-team.pages.debian.net/benchmarksgame/faster/dart-java.html
(Note: the Dart programs only complete reverse-complement at a reduced workload). | null | 0 | 1544561777 | False | 0 | ebl5h6t | t3_a55qhp | null | null | t1_ebktjb3 | /r/programming/comments/a55qhp/the_dart_language_considers_adding_sound/ebl5h6t/ | 1547486311 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lampshadish2 | t2_3dlp3 | Where does prolog fit into this? | null | 0 | 1545839559 | False | 0 | eclasjw | t3_a91l9v | null | null | t1_echs39x | /r/programming/comments/a91l9v/my_unusual_hobby/eclasjw/ | 1548095249 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | seesawupandown | t2_1oweyf | I wish your response was more like: I think you're wrong because of x, y & z, but ... Oh well. | null | 1 | 1544561814 | False | 0 | ebl5j1s | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_ebl0m3s | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebl5j1s/ | 1547486333 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | MatsSvensson | t2_ov053 | Haven't you heard?
Everything is "intelligence" now.
Its the new word for "algorithms".
​ | null | 0 | 1545839637 | False | 0 | eclavyg | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_ecl7mzo | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclavyg/ | 1548095290 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | vielga2 | t2_20robo | > pointers
Right. That is a really bad idea, because we all know **native interop** is science fiction and doesn't really exist.
> operator overloading
I can't help but laugh at the stupidity of java drones arguing that operator overloading is a bad idea, and then going on to do arithmethic operations using java's retarded `BigDecimal` type. There was this post in javasucks.com showing how horrendous, unusable, vomit inducing java is showing some simple `(a * b) / c + d` examples, which were totally unreadable in java because we all know *operator overloading is useless*.
> it came out last September
> right after TWENTY FUCKING YEARS of ecosystem growth WITHOUT proper support for this kind of encapsulation, and yet you expect everything to magically flow happily. lol the complete cluelessness and idiocy of java doesn't cease to surprise me all the time. | null | 0 | 1544561888 | False | 0 | ebl5mq0 | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl5atx | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl5mq0/ | 1547486407 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | michaelochurch | t2_4ocdf | I often encounter the reverse, too: people who hold an extreme distrust and dislike for floating point, as if it were an incorrigible mess as opposed to merely imprecise by necessity.
Floating point numbers are far more precise than the vast, vast majority of real-world measurements... and we have (as a discipline) more than sixty years of experience with numeric algorithms. In the hands of professional engineers, floating point is almost never an issue; the lack of professionalism in most of software is a problem, but it's certainly not the fault of floating-point math. | null | 0 | 1545839662 | False | 0 | eclax0f | t3_a9oey4 | null | null | t1_ecl5ikj | /r/programming/comments/a9oey4/do_developers_understand_ieee_floating_point/eclax0f/ | 1548095304 | 30 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | pdp10 | t2_znec3 | I wonder if Australia will go through with making someone a very visible conscientious objector to this law.
| null | 0 | 1544561936 | False | 0 | ebl5p0i | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t3_a57th7 | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebl5p0i/ | 1547486434 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | duvallg | t2_3iwo9 | It’s a sad statement on the state of the profession if you’re legitimately asking this question. | null | 0 | 1545839724 | False | 0 | eclazlo | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_ecl6lza | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclazlo/ | 1548095335 | 17 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | peterwilli | t2_dwi1a | There are worse things that can happen, like having your password or credit card details stolen.
Having that said, I'm not implying that Mozilla (or the contributors) should just leave this bug untouched just because "it's not such a big deal anyway", I'm implying that it's not as bad as the title seems to describe. | null | 0 | 1544561968 | False | 0 | ebl5qkp | t3_a549og | null | null | t1_ebl0j1x | /r/programming/comments/a549og/malicious_sites_abuse_11yearold_firefox_bug_that/ebl5qkp/ | 1547486466 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | takingastep | t2_1qzza4a | Interesting. The AirCTO main website is up and running just fine, it seems, but their blog is what's down. | null | 0 | 1545839728 | False | 0 | eclazsw | t3_a9nki8 | null | null | t3_a9nki8 | /r/programming/comments/a9nki8/23_awesome_programming_blogs_to_follow_in_2019/eclazsw/ | 1548095338 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | sysop073 | t2_326m9 | What does it give you over a tarball of the .git directory? | null | 0 | 1544562017 | False | 0 | ebl5t1o | t3_a59gw5 | null | null | t1_ebl53x6 | /r/programming/comments/a59gw5/git_bundle_converts_your_whole_repository_into_a/ebl5t1o/ | 1547486497 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | wredue | t2_1rbubxg4 | Enterprise is rarely ever changing. They value consistency and tried and tested in enterprise usually. Enterprise doesn’t like surprises, and they especially don’t like surprise mandatory work. So the “rewrite it” over “make it work” is also unlikely. Enterprise will often sit on a code base for decades past when they should have rewrote. | null | 0 | 1545839774 | False | 0 | eclb1ry | t3_a9hs3u | null | null | t1_eckjuda | /r/programming/comments/a9hs3u/the_ant_design_christmas_egg_that_went_wrong/eclb1ry/ | 1548095363 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lbkulinski | t2_17799v | Operator overloading makes sense for numerics, but we both know people abuse with with things like I/O :)
You love the word retarded, don't you? | null | 0 | 1544562127 | False | 0 | ebl5yf4 | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl5mq0 | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl5yf4/ | 1547486562 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | kankyo | t2_77w4q | Text selection is a bit wonky with keyboard. As I remember it the basic implementation seems to be complex instead of simple in some weird way.
So what you'd expect is that if you hold shift the program remembers that position in a slot Start and then you can move around the normal cursor like normal (up, down, with ctrl, page up etc) and the selection is all text between this Start and the current cursor position (no matter which is first in the document). | null | 0 | 1545839795 | False | 0 | eclb2on | t3_a9njuu | null | null | t1_ecl7xwg | /r/programming/comments/a9njuu/micro_intuitive_terminalbased_text_editor/eclb2on/ | 1548095404 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bloody-albatross | t2_cdjk3 | It's less about the software and more about the protocol, IMO. With email or IRC it doesn't matter if a certain client or server is discontinued. With Slack there is only slack. No interoperability, no open protocol. | null | 0 | 1544562127 | False | 0 | ebl5yg2 | t3_a4oi4w | null | null | t1_ebhsokv | /r/programming/comments/a4oi4w/git_v2200_released/ebl5yg2/ | 1547486563 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | kankyo | t2_77w4q | ;) I see what you did there | null | 0 | 1545839882 | False | 0 | eclb6hc | t3_a9njuu | null | null | t1_ecl8ykm | /r/programming/comments/a9njuu/micro_intuitive_terminalbased_text_editor/eclb6hc/ | 1548095450 | 11 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | s73v3r | t2_3c7qc | One of the reasons why they pay so much is that the business makes several times that per employee off of their work. | null | 0 | 1544562127 | False | 0 | ebl5yg8 | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebgr7o7 | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebl5yg8/ | 1547486563 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | kankyo | t2_77w4q | Yea, the right answer is: you want it? Make your own fork. | null | 0 | 1545839930 | False | 0 | eclb8nh | t3_a9njuu | null | null | t1_ecl9qpq | /r/programming/comments/a9njuu/micro_intuitive_terminalbased_text_editor/eclb8nh/ | 1548095477 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | peterwilli | t2_dwi1a | Depends on what you're perspective is: I know it doesn't say that anywhere, but neither does it say that it's a bug that traps users in web pages.
They could also say: "Malicious sites keep users on their pages using 11-year-old Firefox bug that Mozilla failed to fix".
Just reading that there is a bug (any possible bug just by reading the title) forces me to go to the article without any expectations other than "wow this could be huge!". I think that qualifies as clickbait. | null | 0 | 1544562210 | False | 0 | ebl62l0 | t3_a549og | null | null | t1_ebkyseu | /r/programming/comments/a549og/malicious_sites_abuse_11yearold_firefox_bug_that/ebl62l0/ | 1547486614 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mwb1234 | t2_anxhw | Hey your website dead | null | 0 | 1545839966 | False | 0 | eclbad1 | t3_a9nki8 | null | null | t3_a9nki8 | /r/programming/comments/a9nki8/23_awesome_programming_blogs_to_follow_in_2019/eclbad1/ | 1548095499 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | data-punk | t2_1nvzg4ji | I assure you, the first instance of an Australian employee found compromising their employer's product would not only face the legal backlash of their host country but will send a monument of shockwaves through the tech industry. No one is going to hire a handcuffed potential rat. | null | 0 | 1544562235 | False | 0 | ebl63sw | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_ebkk5s3 | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebl63sw/ | 1547486629 | 22 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | kankyo | t2_77w4q | On the bright side it doesn't conflict with any system shortcuts. | null | 0 | 1545840051 | False | 0 | eclbe7r | t3_a9njuu | null | null | t1_eclahj5 | /r/programming/comments/a9njuu/micro_intuitive_terminalbased_text_editor/eclbe7r/ | 1548095546 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ThatOnePerson | t2_4ylgm | His other content is pretty good too. I just bought his eBook he mentioned in the opening. | null | 0 | 1544562235 | False | 0 | ebl63tp | t3_a55xbm | null | null | t1_ebkj8rt | /r/programming/comments/a55xbm/how_the_dreamcast_copy_protection_was_defeated/ebl63tp/ | 1547486629 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HalibetLector | t2_17d4bn | Even wronger answer. | null | 0 | 1545840061 | False | 0 | eclbeos | t3_a9njuu | null | null | t1_eclaa50 | /r/programming/comments/a9njuu/micro_intuitive_terminalbased_text_editor/eclbeos/ | 1548095552 | -5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bloody-albatross | t2_cdjk3 | And there are examples like XFree86 -> XOrg, where enough people where dissatisfied and forked (if I understand correctly what happened). Also OpenOffice -> LibreOffice I think? | null | 0 | 1544562239 | False | 0 | ebl6402 | t3_a4oi4w | null | null | t1_ebigjp5 | /r/programming/comments/a4oi4w/git_v2200_released/ebl6402/ | 1547486632 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Landmaj | t2_hl361 | I wanted to like Micro, but constant issues with copying text from and to system clipboard were too much. | null | 0 | 1545840071 | False | 0 | eclbf31 | t3_a9njuu | null | null | t3_a9njuu | /r/programming/comments/a9njuu/micro_intuitive_terminalbased_text_editor/eclbf31/ | 1548095557 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | grauenwolf | t2_570j | What if you need 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and later 8 back ticks in different places? Do you keep adding more and more onto the start and end, trying to guess how many will put you in the clear?
Let's say we're writing a code generator. My code:
Append("x = `" + Repace(s, "`", "``") + "`")
One simple line. You need to search for the longest series of backticks before you can even get started.
Or let's say we need to inline a hundred lives of SQL nonsnse.
I can paste mine into a text editor, run a single search and replace, then paste it in a code window. You need to hand count the number of backticks. | null | 0 | 1544562244 | False | 0 | ebl6486 | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl5h3c | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl6486/ | 1547486633 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HalibetLector | t2_17d4bn | The best answer is: there's a plugin for that. | null | 0 | 1545840083 | False | 0 | eclbfna | t3_a9njuu | null | null | t1_eclb8nh | /r/programming/comments/a9njuu/micro_intuitive_terminalbased_text_editor/eclbfna/ | 1548095564 | -5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ReDucTor | t2_4cv2u | Hivemind | null | 0 | 1544562293 | False | 0 | ebl66np | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_ebl3uwn | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebl66np/ | 1547486664 | -6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HellfireOwner | t2_2juz5fhu | Hmmmph, we will see just how comprehensive...
​
Just as I thought, nothing about pickle! JUNK! ;)
​
Lol...on the reals though, best python cheat sheet I've seen. Definitely a keeper. | null | 0 | 1545840146 | False | 0 | eclbifg | t3_a9o4zd | null | null | t3_a9o4zd | /r/programming/comments/a9o4zd/comprehensive_python_cheatsheet/eclbifg/ | 1548095598 | 16 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | grauenwolf | t2_570j | It's also the only type inference that most people care about. | null | 0 | 1544562304 | False | 0 | ebl678g | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl49c5 | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl678g/ | 1547486671 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | maahp | t2_l8o3383 | I'm a software engineer myself. It's all about trade-offs when designing a solution. This just seems like gatekeeping to me. | null | 1 | 1545840190 | False | 0 | eclbkeo | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_eclazlo | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclbkeo/ | 1548095622 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | crashorbit | t2_3z9ie | Interesting article. But not really "engineering" principles. Those things are all core software craftsmanship expectations. You are not doing "software engineering" until you are making regular, reliable production deployments that meet the changing needs of your user community. You can't get there without the items in the article but they are not enough by themselves. | null | 0 | 1544562401 | False | 0 | ebl6byn | t3_a5ao0e | null | null | t3_a5ao0e | /r/programming/comments/a5ao0e/what_are_the_best_software_engineering_principles/ebl6byn/ | 1547486730 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mttd | t2_6gkbb | > Interesting study. But the harder question is: What to do about it?
Some ideas in the paper (snippet below). Some of that is raising awareness, say, about the effect of compilation options like `-O3` & FMA implications w.r.t. precision and rounding (cf. https://accurate-algorithms.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ch03fma.html#software-and-compiler-support) or `--ffast-math` implied by `-Ofast` (which is _not_ even necessary for auto-vectorization: it only needs `-fno-finite-math-only` which has the advantage of not breaking NaN behavior) and the resulting non-standard compliant behavior mentioned in the paper.
Other than the tools they cite, these collections are also pretty good:
* Compilation of research efforts and software tools devoted to program analysis of floating-point code
+ https://w3.cs.jmu.edu/lam2mo/fpanalysis.html
* Community Tools: Tools from the Floating-point Research World
+ http://fpbench.org/community.html
+ some of the tools discussed in the talk "Numerical Tools for Non-Experts": https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/video/numerical-tools-for-non-experts/
Fragment with "calls to action" (from the Conclusions):
> "Stepping back from the data and analysis, we believe that some generalizations can be made, along with actions to address them.
> **Observation:** Many developers do not understand core floating point behavior particularly well, yet believe they do. This suggests that some existing and future codebases may have hidden numeric correctness issues. This is probably more likely to be the case in smaller and newer projects where there is no specialist whose role is in part to mitigate these issues. As use of floating point rapidly expands outside of the traditional domains of science and engineering, the problem is likely becoming widespread.
> **Action:** The HPC community should make an effort to make developers in general more suspicious about floating point behavior. The analogy might be how the programming languages and operating systems communities have raised awareness about C’s undefined behavior and its interaction with modern compilers [12], [14].
> **Action:** Although our study found that formal training in floating point has only a small effect on understanding, we believe the issue is not that training does not work per se, but rather that the community has just not found the right training approach yet. A rigorous process to develop effective training for a broad range of developers is an action that the HPC community, for example via SIGHPC, could undertake. We would then also need to convince the broader (and ever expanding) non-CS community of developers that such training is necessary.
> **Action:** Static and dynamic analysis tools that can examine existing codebases and point developers to potentially suspicious code would likely have significant impact. Several such tools exist [1], [11], [8], but the tools would also need to have interfaces suitable for a non-CS community and have a low barrier to use. Perhaps commercial tools like Coverity [2] will expand their purview to include floating point. We ourselves have been developing a simple runtime monitoring tool to spy on unmodified binaries and track exceptional conditions using floating point condition codes, similar to the structure of the suspicion quiz.
> **Action:** The boundary between floating point and arbitrary precision arithmetic is too thick. A system that would allow code written using floating point to be seamlessly compiled to use arbitrary precision would enable developers to easily sanity check the behavior of their code (and any optimizations they chose). A particularly paranoid developer could just opt for slow, arbitrary precision results.
> **Observation:** Many developers recognize their lack of knowledge of how hardware and software optimizations affect floating point behavior. As the space of such optimizations expands, it could be that developers simply use them without understanding the consequences, or developers could simply avoid them out of fear of incorrect results, which would reduce their impact. There may be a parallel with the OS developer community, where optimizations that leverage C’s undefined behavior are carefully avoided lest they break working kernel code or make it insecure.
> **Action:** We need to assess to what extent developers wittingly or unwittingly use hardware and software optimizations without knowing their consequences. Are they as conservative about what they use as they are about what they think they know? If not, then the introduction of optimizations may be leaving a hidden trail of incorrect results behind it.
> **Action:** Optimization implementations should take developer knowledge into account—ideally, a developer would not be able to use an optimization without demonstrating that they understand it. How can we create an effective interface for this that would not be gameable or too onerous to use?"
References (cited above):
* [1] F. Benz, A. Hildebrandt, and S. Hack, “A dynamic program analysis to find floating-point accuracy problems,” in Proceedings of the 33rd ACM SIGPLAN Conference on Programming Language Design and Implementation (PLDI), 2012.
* [2] A. Bessey, K. Block, B. Chelf, A. Chou, B. Fulton, S. Hallem, C. Henri-Gros, A. Kamsky, S. McPeak, and D. Engler, “A few billion lines of code later: Using static analysis to find bugs in the real world,” Commuications of the ACM, vol. 53, no. 2, pp. 66–75, February 2010.
* [8] M. O. Lam, J. K. Hollingsworth, and G. Stewart, “Dynamic floating-point cancellation detection,” Parallel Computing, vol. 39, no. 3, pp. 146–155, 2013.
* [11] P. Panchekha, A. Sanchez-Stern, J. R. Wilcox, and Z. Tatlock, “Automatically improving accuracy for floating point expressions,” in Proceedings of the 36th ACM SIGPLAN Conference on Programming Language Design and Implementation (PLDI), 2015.
* [12] J. Regehr, “Embedded in academia,” https://blog.regehr.org/, a long running series of posts on undefined behavior has been widely read.
* [14] X. Wang, N. Zeldovich, M. F. Kaashoek, and A. SolarLezama, “Towards optimization-safe systems: Analyzing the impact of undefined behavior,” in Proceedings of the 24th
ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles (SOSP), November 2013.
| null | 0 | 1545840326 | 1545841233 | 0 | eclbqkm | t3_a9oey4 | null | null | t1_ecl4pg5 | /r/programming/comments/a9oey4/do_developers_understand_ieee_floating_point/eclbqkm/ | 1548095699 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | grauenwolf | t2_570j | If you want that, use an abstract class. Interfaces in Java and C# were supposed to be stable things that we could count on. Small and single purposed, not dumping grounds for every wild idea. | null | 1 | 1544562446 | False | 0 | ebl6e63 | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl4cye | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl6e63/ | 1547486757 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Loaatao | t2_6lpoq | I just want to say thank you for making this technology.
I love voice products but not sending so much data to the cloud. This is a step forward for privacy. Thank you! | null | 0 | 1545840377 | False | 0 | eclbsyc | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_ecl52z6 | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclbsyc/ | 1548095728 | 134 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | saltupz | t2_1apw6yx6 | Haha! You again? Seems like all you do is troll. I suggest a shrink, or just some away time from the internet as it seems to be too overwhelming.
I hate to inform that many lanaguages are eager by nature, and will rerun iterations when piped. This is easily fixed with a composed function, or just by using streams. This is also rarely a bottleneck, unless you are processing millions of items. | null | 0 | 1544562451 | False | 0 | ebl6egd | t3_a544ls | null | null | t1_ebjtgqz | /r/programming/comments/a544ls/understand_arraymap_in_javascript_by_rolling_your/ebl6egd/ | 1547486761 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 1 | 1545840673 | 1545840900 | 0 | eclc5ql | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_eclbkeo | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclc5ql/ | 1548095886 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | justinlindh | t2_8kxgc | I could have sworn it was imgburn. I guess I don't remember what software was used to clone PS1 discs, but wasn't it easy to do? | null | 0 | 1544562451 | False | 0 | ebl6egr | t3_a55xbm | null | null | t1_ebl5ess | /r/programming/comments/a55xbm/how_the_dreamcast_copy_protection_was_defeated/ebl6egr/ | 1547486761 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HomeBrewingCoder | t2_149sqrr2 | Also techempower doesn't test to failure. I use at work a simple and kind of shitty Java REST framework (but nice to work with) called dropwizard. Our workload is pretty bursty (many vendors making scheduled calls on the hour). I have been unable to force a failure in this framework with time constrained bursts.
In .net core I cannot say the same thing. In fact the first benchmark I needed to test both against (downloading a burst of uncacheable images) fails utterly in .net core. The small Java server served this without issue. The .net core server would hang forever on relatively small sustained bursts.
At the end of the day I haven't ever felt constrained by my language of choice in what I can and can't do when I used Java. I can't say the same with .net core. | null | 0 | 1545840681 | False | 0 | eclc62c | t3_a9ossx | null | null | t1_ecl8ekc | /r/programming/comments/a9ossx/java_versus_c_net_core_fastest_programs/eclc62c/ | 1548095891 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | data-punk | t2_1nvzg4ji | sure.
DONT LOOK AT MY FUCKING DATA.
-the internet | null | 0 | 1544562459 | False | 0 | ebl6eus | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_ebl3uwn | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebl6eus/ | 1547486766 | 20 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HereBWallace | t2_odj40d6 | Hey. Are you hiring? What do you think you'd be looking for in like 1.5 years? | null | 0 | 1545840701 | False | 0 | eclc6zc | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_ecl4xsb | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclc6zc/ | 1548095902 | 14 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | spook327 | t2_3a794 | No, I know a fair bit goes into making something look decent even when it's minimalist like that. I was just playing into the joke. Probably shouldn't do that here, got a bunch of Drax the Destroyers all over, but without the charm. | null | 0 | 1544562472 | False | 0 | ebl6fho | t3_a55xbm | null | null | t1_ebkh6pr | /r/programming/comments/a55xbm/how_the_dreamcast_copy_protection_was_defeated/ebl6fho/ | 1547486773 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | swordglowsblue | t2_2nrkh5d0 | I would personally highly recommend Micro. I don't do a ton of editing in the terminal, but I'm no stranger to it, and Micro has been my goto for quite a while. Easy to install, easy to use, helpful documentation, and most importantly familiar keybindings for anyone used to a GUI editor like me. | null | 0 | 1545840765 | False | 0 | eclc9m1 | t3_a9njuu | null | null | t3_a9njuu | /r/programming/comments/a9njuu/micro_intuitive_terminalbased_text_editor/eclc9m1/ | 1548095935 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1544562479 | 1545958609 | 0 | ebl6fuh | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl3o8x | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl6fuh/ | 1547486778 | 35 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | alikenar | t2_125par4o | Hahaha! I make sure I deliver the message to my parents ;-) | null | 0 | 1545840771 | False | 0 | eclc9vb | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_eclarxt | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclc9vb/ | 1548095937 | 20 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lbkulinski | t2_17799v | The point I was trying to make is that the language architects don't want to tie users down to a single delimiter. Raw Strings should be raw and non-restrictive. | null | 0 | 1544562500 | False | 0 | ebl6gwg | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl6486 | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl6gwg/ | 1547486792 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | alikenar | t2_125par4o | You are very welcome | null | 0 | 1545840790 | False | 0 | eclcamr | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_eclbsyc | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclcamr/ | 1548095947 | 56 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | hotkarlmarxbros | t2_6ik0j | Yeah, I think the key here is “designing something.” If you have a team of engineers, merely obscuring your attack vector is pretty poor practice. If you are lazy me, hiding some documents in a fake can of spray and wash is not nearly as serious a concern. | null | 0 | 1544562529 | False | 0 | ebl6iap | t3_a55xbm | null | null | t1_ebkoajg | /r/programming/comments/a55xbm/how_the_dreamcast_copy_protection_was_defeated/ebl6iap/ | 1547486809 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lebogglez | t2_kicp1 | If you can not get management to listen to you at all even after a year or two and really think what you say is reasonable, I would leave the company. But to be fair I also see a lot of devs who just started at a company, don't understand its circumstances yet, but still they already want to change its procedures and direction in major ways. Others, even after working at a company for years, don't have any empathy and only consider their own problems and they try to make it easier for themselves. So make sure you're none of those two, and if you think you aren't, look for a better place to work at. Life is short. | null | 0 | 1545840793 | False | 0 | eclcaqu | t3_a7xwy3 | null | null | t1_ecla7x6 | /r/programming/comments/a7xwy3/theres_already_a_blueprint_for_a_more_accessible/eclcaqu/ | 1548095948 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Darkglow666 | t2_aaxo5 | The problems don't stop there since the rulings that APIs can be copyrighted. The continuing possibility of these kinds of issues is one of many reasons Google is developing Fuchsia, which many believe may be a future replacement for Android and Chrome OS. | null | 0 | 1544562558 | False | 0 | ebl6jr9 | t3_a55qhp | null | null | t1_ebks2fy | /r/programming/comments/a55qhp/the_dart_language_considers_adding_sound/ebl6jr9/ | 1547486827 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | FearAndLawyering | t2_96oah | Time is often the most expensive resource of them all. Shipping it faster is going to trump everything else. Even in your bridge building example, if it took twice as long to make a more efficient bridge, they're still going to do it faster if possible. | null | 0 | 1545840816 | False | 0 | eclcbo9 | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_ecl7gau | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclcbo9/ | 1548095959 | 9 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | grauenwolf | t2_570j | White space isn't an issue here, but your other point convinced me. | null | 0 | 1544562583 | False | 0 | ebl6kzs | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl6fuh | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl6kzs/ | 1547486842 | 15 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | adityamishra282 | t2_2v2fhh5z | Amazing list. But seems to be site is down now. I am unable to open the page. | null | 0 | 1545840818 | False | 0 | eclcbrh | t3_a9nki8 | null | null | t3_a9nki8 | /r/programming/comments/a9nki8/23_awesome_programming_blogs_to_follow_in_2019/eclcbrh/ | 1548095961 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Spartanobeana | t2_69zhs | Is it this one? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUwSOfQ1D3c | null | 0 | 1544562583 | False | 0 | ebl6kzv | t3_a55xbm | null | null | t1_ebl4sw0 | /r/programming/comments/a55xbm/how_the_dreamcast_copy_protection_was_defeated/ebl6kzv/ | 1547486842 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | auxiliary-character | t2_57joa | China was socialist under Mao. Any commie would argue that no socialist state has every achieved true communism, since socialism is only a stepping stone in order to get there (thus the "no true communism"). I would say that they are enacting socialism for the purpose of trying to achieve communism, even though I think it's inevitably a futile effort; "true communism" will never happen, and socialism will only ever descend into totalitarianism.
China relented, and implemented some aspects of capitalism as a response to the failures of socialism, however quite a bit of the socialist state still remains. For instance, rural land is still collectively owned (i.e., controlled by the state), which results in some rather [interesting economic effects](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f5SE47Xjx2Q). | null | 0 | 1545840842 | False | 0 | eclccrt | t3_a9hs3u | null | null | t1_ecl852u | /r/programming/comments/a9hs3u/the_ant_design_christmas_egg_that_went_wrong/eclccrt/ | 1548096002 | -1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | vielga2 | t2_20robo | > people abuse
Yes, please. I will give you one week worth of my gross income if you find me ONE (1) example of abuse of this feature in ANY C# codebase in **THE ENTIRETY OF GITHUB**, PLEASE.
But then again, java developers are clueless drones, and therefore they can't be given any supposedly "advanced" features (which really aren't) because they would misuse them. Yes I can't let my 4 year old kid drive my car either anyways.
Btw, english isn't my native language. I'll go get a dictionary to find and learn new ways of insulting java assholes. | null | 0 | 1544562629 | False | 0 | ebl6n9z | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl5yf4 | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl6n9z/ | 1547486869 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Sullinator07 | t2_7m9u4 | your link is throwing out a 503 error | null | 0 | 1545840862 | False | 0 | eclcdme | t3_a9nki8 | null | null | t3_a9nki8 | /r/programming/comments/a9nki8/23_awesome_programming_blogs_to_follow_in_2019/eclcdme/ | 1548096012 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | claytonkb | t2_61b8b | Touche | null | 0 | 1544562668 | False | 0 | ebl6p9o | t3_a58gd2 | null | null | t1_ebl4yko | /r/programming/comments/a58gd2/finding_prime_numbers_using_sieve_of_eratosthenes/ebl6p9o/ | 1547486894 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | pizzaburek | t2_o6hb7 | Man, here goes my night's sleep, lol. Totally missed that one.
Are there any third party serialization libraries that are preferred to pickle? Are web frameworks like Django built on it? | null | 0 | 1545840908 | 1545841169 | 0 | eclcfj1 | t3_a9o4zd | null | null | t1_eclbifg | /r/programming/comments/a9o4zd/comprehensive_python_cheatsheet/eclcfj1/ | 1548096035 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lbkulinski | t2_17799v | You can still count on them with `default` methods. If you don’t like the default implementation, you can override it in your class.
They also helped make functional interfaces, a pattern often used in Java, compatible with lambdas. | null | 0 | 1544562698 | False | 0 | ebl6qqs | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl6e63 | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl6qqs/ | 1547486912 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | otwo3 | t2_11gj9f | Amen. As an embedded software developer for the past 5 years, I wish I could be shipping features as fast as people in the web / desktop app industry do.
Yes it's not optimal, and they're wasting loads of RAM to allow amazing abstractions and portability in ways that may be improved, but the time-to-market and the features themselves are ridiculously better than what I see in the embedded industry.
When developing programs on embedded systems with zero abstractions and without a proper OS every small thing takes forever to develop. It's hard to test, it's hard to debug, it's hard to write features, it's hard to fit your code in limited amounts of memory. Also, everything you do is extremely platform specific.
You could find yourself spending 2 weeks debugging odd behavior of your code only to find out the power supply to your niche hardware is unstable and causing the CPU to execute some instructions wrong (true story).
Offline voice AI on 512kb is impressive and true engineering. Writing a complex feature rich web app on Electron is also engineering. Stop the gatekeeping. | null | 0 | 1545840953 | False | 0 | eclchap | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_eclbkeo | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclchap/ | 1548096057 | 25 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | grauenwolf | t2_570j | And I want my farts to smell like freshly mowed grass. But rather than looking at ideas, let's try to focus on outcomes.
And the outcome of having to count backticks in a string is a right pain in the ass. | null | 0 | 1544562733 | False | 0 | ebl6sf4 | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl6gwg | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl6sf4/ | 1547486933 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | alikenar | t2_125par4o | We sure are. We definitely need to expand the team.
​
I guess by what we are looking for you mean skill set? I really just need solid knowledge of one modern programming language and also basic math. But then we need people who are extremely smart and not afraid to work hard. | null | 0 | 1545840955 | False | 0 | eclchdq | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_eclc6zc | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclchdq/ | 1548096058 | 17 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | FierceDeity_ | t2_vgcz6 | The eyes become a limiting factor, that's true, heh. | null | 0 | 1544562789 | False | 0 | ebl6v5k | t3_a55xbm | null | null | t1_ebkzwaw | /r/programming/comments/a55xbm/how_the_dreamcast_copy_protection_was_defeated/ebl6v5k/ | 1547486966 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mttd | t2_6gkbb | > I often encounter the reverse, too: people who hold an extreme distrust and dislike for floating point, as if it were an incorrigible mess as opposed to merely imprecise by necessity.
https://randomascii.wordpress.com/2017/06/19/sometimes-floating-point-math-is-perfect/ is a good read on this (and the whole series for that matter; https://randomascii.wordpress.com/category/floating-point/)
I particularly love "evangelizing" Dekker’s Theorem and Sterbenz’s Theorem (the latter is mentioned in the blog post) -- not only because they disabuse of the incorrect "floats are imprecise" notion, but also happen to be super cool :-)
Great use (and introduction to these) in "On Automatically Proving the Correctness of math.h Implementations": http://theory.stanford.edu/~aiken/publications/papers/popl18.pdf (somewhat more introductory / general audience talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KH5fCmOVglc).
| null | 0 | 1545841077 | 1545841378 | 0 | eclcmg8 | t3_a9oey4 | null | null | t1_eclax0f | /r/programming/comments/a9oey4/do_developers_understand_ieee_floating_point/eclcmg8/ | 1548096121 | 9 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dalittle | t2_4ahob | saying you don't remember worked for [alberto gonzalez](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alberto_Gonzales) in the US. He was the US Attorney General under bush jr and when he got into trouble his answers would lead you to believe he had no idea how his office ran. | null | 0 | 1544562838 | False | 0 | ebl6xli | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_ebklghs | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebl6xli/ | 1547487014 | 9 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | AckmanDESU | t2_7f0sl | What if the bridge is crossed by thousands every day and it doesn’t collapse, it simply looks kinda bad? | null | 0 | 1545841095 | False | 0 | eclcn7o | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_eclanjc | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclcn7o/ | 1548096130 | -12 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | warmans | t2_58n55 | Man these acronyms are getting so confusing. | null | 0 | 1544562840 | False | 0 | ebl6xpu | t3_a57gmy | null | null | t1_ebl0j59 | /r/programming/comments/a57gmy/new_experimental_windows_console_features/ebl6xpu/ | 1547487016 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Finnthehuman27 | t2_amhmw | Thank you this is going to be a great help!! | null | 0 | 1545841115 | False | 0 | eclco26 | t3_a9o4zd | null | null | t3_a9o4zd | /r/programming/comments/a9o4zd/comprehensive_python_cheatsheet/eclco26/ | 1548096142 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ApatheticBeardo | t2_h4ojp3s | Eww. | null | 0 | 1544562921 | False | 0 | ebl71rh | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebkzw6p | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl71rh/ | 1547487066 | 21 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | RainbowGoddamnDash | t2_66227 | This is interesting, I'm a former barista and was always working alone in the shop.
Having something that can remember and print out a ticket of the order while I'm busy making it, and not distract me from doing latte art would have been super beneficial. Especially since the locations I worked at, had really shitty wi-fi. | null | 0 | 1545841115 | False | 0 | eclco2m | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_ecl4xsb | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclco2m/ | 1548096142 | 12 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | stevegossman83 | t2_wifmj | They have implemented 80s technology. Praise be. | null | 0 | 1544562937 | False | 0 | ebl72ia | t3_a57gmy | null | null | t1_ebkxo0k | /r/programming/comments/a57gmy/new_experimental_windows_console_features/ebl72ia/ | 1547487075 | 98 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | suraj4 | t2_zfass | Blog is up now.
We just sent a new build. Sorry for inconvenience | null | 0 | 1545841198 | False | 0 | eclcrjm | t3_a9nki8 | null | null | t3_a9nki8 | /r/programming/comments/a9nki8/23_awesome_programming_blogs_to_follow_in_2019/eclcrjm/ | 1548096185 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | grauenwolf | t2_570j | I understand why Java needed them, they were already breaking interfaces left and right between versions. And their ongoing pissing match with MS means they will never add real delegates/function pointers and events.
But in C# they don't solve a problem. With extension methods and optional interfaces we offer the same capability for extension without changing the definition of "interface". | null | 0 | 1544562959 | False | 0 | ebl73mq | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl6qqs | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl73mq/ | 1547487089 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dacian88 | t2_495ze | I’m mostly talking about flutter, I don’t see any other compelling reason to use dart other than for flutter/fuchsia. Yea google uses it for some web apps, the language on its own is extremely unremarkable. | null | 0 | 1545841221 | False | 0 | eclcsj6 | t3_a9f2ni | null | null | t1_eck9u1r | /r/programming/comments/a9f2ni/how_flutter_uses_widgets_elements_and/eclcsj6/ | 1548096197 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | s73v3r | t2_3c7qc | There is no tax bracket that is 50%. And your example assumes that you're paying your entire paycheck in rent, which at the levels we're talking about is absurd. | null | 0 | 1544562972 | False | 0 | ebl74aj | t3_a4n8jv | null | null | t1_ebkywyv | /r/programming/comments/a4n8jv/why_software_developers_are_paid_5x_more_in_the/ebl74aj/ | 1547487097 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | sinedpick | t2_ksuu9 | Don't feel too bad if you can't achieve all of these, even EMACS can't.
response to edit: searching directories isn't the job of a text editor... | null | 0 | 1545841311 | 1545851820 | 0 | eclcwc8 | t3_a9njuu | null | null | t1_eckxiiy | /r/programming/comments/a9njuu/micro_intuitive_terminalbased_text_editor/eclcwc8/ | 1548096244 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | stevegossman83 | t2_wifmj | > There is nothing wrong with the NT kernel.
Doesn't NT use exceptions for control flow? | null | 0 | 1544562999 | False | 0 | ebl75le | t3_a57gmy | null | null | t1_ebkz3qu | /r/programming/comments/a57gmy/new_experimental_windows_console_features/ebl75le/ | 1547487113 | -30 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | duvallg | t2_3iwo9 | If it’s the only way to get from point A to B and traversing that bridge means depleting most of your resources to get to the other end, yes, it looks pretty bad.
But the commuter doesn’t have any other choice, so that makes it ok? | null | 0 | 1545841326 | False | 0 | eclcwya | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_eclcn7o | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclcwya/ | 1548096252 | 12 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Determinant | t2_3fmrp | Kotlin welcomes everyone.
In addition to string literals, Kotlin has dozens of other productivity improvements and can be used alongside your existing Java classes. | null | 0 | 1544563003 | False | 0 | ebl75t7 | t3_a5969k | null | null | t3_a5969k | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl75t7/ | 1547487116 | 110 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | adrianjord | t2_nuqk31s | Looking at the quick start guide, the install.sh checks that vim or neovim is installed on the machine and fails if it is not. There's nothing the mentions anything about a customized binary. | null | 0 | 1545841327 | False | 0 | eclcx0o | t3_a9fg8h | null | null | t1_eckjkra | /r/programming/comments/a9fg8h/spacevim_release_v100/eclcx0o/ | 1548096253 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | iamsubs | t2_rz31d | As a resident of a very corrupt country, it pisses me off that laws are made in a way that always protect corruption. And it is blatant | null | 0 | 1544563009 | False | 0 | ebl762n | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_ebkihpi | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebl762n/ | 1547487119 | 11 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1545841339 | 1545952331 | 0 | eclcxif | t3_a9hs3u | null | null | t1_eckzkch | /r/programming/comments/a9hs3u/the_ant_design_christmas_egg_that_went_wrong/eclcxif/ | 1548096258 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1544563024 | 1545426685 | 0 | ebl76t5 | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_ebl352a | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebl76t5/ | 1547487129 | 31 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | sinedpick | t2_ksuu9 | > It is just exhausting to memorize that complex vim commands.
Perhaps, but I don't know a single person who has and doesn't regard it as an improvement to their workflow. | null | 0 | 1545841357 | False | 0 | eclcya3 | t3_a9njuu | null | null | t1_ecl7umx | /r/programming/comments/a9njuu/micro_intuitive_terminalbased_text_editor/eclcya3/ | 1548096268 | 12 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bartturner | t2_dyc5p | Saw this but was not sure if used AOT? | null | 0 | 1544563025 | False | 0 | ebl76uc | t3_a55qhp | null | null | t1_ebl5h6t | /r/programming/comments/a55qhp/the_dart_language_considers_adding_sound/ebl76uc/ | 1547487129 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Tyuiop71 | t2_4wae923 | That doesn't change the engineer being an engineer or not lol | null | 0 | 1545841358 | False | 0 | eclcybp | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_eclcn7o | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/eclcybp/ | 1548096269 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lbkulinski | t2_17799v | Why does Java need function pointers? Functional interfaces serve the same purpose. | null | 0 | 1544563110 | False | 0 | ebl7azk | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl73mq | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl7azk/ | 1547487180 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dacian88 | t2_495ze | Right, so if you use it for a non-heavyweight project the risk is low. I think they are adding single view support for android and iOS so you can also go that path and experiment with it for parts of your app. I think google is gearing up to make fuchsia a thing but we don’t know exactly what they’re gonna do with it, hence the risk. | null | 0 | 1545841484 | False | 0 | ecld3kv | t3_a9f2ni | null | null | t1_ecjaftn | /r/programming/comments/a9f2ni/how_flutter_uses_widgets_elements_and/ecld3kv/ | 1548096333 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ApatheticBeardo | t2_h4ojp3s | > Java will do things right
Like those awkward streams and crippled generics? | null | 1 | 1544563115 | False | 0 | ebl7b8p | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl0gma | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl7b8p/ | 1547487183 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | pirate_starbridge | t2_43ecm | "hey bash, tail space minus em space slash tomcat slash logs slash catalina dot out space pipe space slash u-s-r slash bin slash speechrenderinput"
please no | null | 0 | 1545841501 | 1545842688 | 0 | ecld4ak | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_ecl4kc0 | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/ecld4ak/ | 1548096342 | 144 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | flukus | t2_3855p | Is that for senior or junior roles? Sometimes for the junior roles you really do want code slingers because others are looking at the big picture.
I haven't run into many that don't acknowledge that they're job is to solve problems, but often they fall down trying to solve much bigger problems than the one at hand because that's more fun than boring imperative business logic that gets the job done. | null | 0 | 1544563126 | False | 0 | ebl7bs7 | t3_a57fby | null | null | t1_ebkd5bo | /r/programming/comments/a57fby/the_complexity_trap/ebl7bs7/ | 1547487189 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1545841522 | False | 0 | ecld54u | t3_a9njuu | null | null | t1_eclbe7r | /r/programming/comments/a9njuu/micro_intuitive_terminalbased_text_editor/ecld54u/ | 1548096352 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | shevegen | t2_atqp | Well - the australians currently have a mafia posing as government. Unfortunately there isn't that much that can be done while this mafia is in place.
Vote them out; or implement direct democracy so you don't have to deal with the next lobbyist group taking over power.
As for software developers - don't become a patsy for this mafia posing as government by working against people.
> Is this about fighting terrorism and child abuse?
> Kinda.
No, it is not "kinda".
It has absolutely nothing to do about "terrorism" or "child abuse" - these
are just fancy promotional ads to leverage and enforce slavery.
They want to spy on everyone no matter the reason.
It is a mafia. | null | 1 | 1544563206 | False | 0 | ebl7fpq | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t3_a57th7 | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebl7fpq/ | 1547487238 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | blogrags | t2_rxrzmxd | Fixed now 😃 | null | 0 | 1545841595 | False | 0 | ecld85q | t3_a9nki8 | null | null | t1_eclcbrh | /r/programming/comments/a9nki8/23_awesome_programming_blogs_to_follow_in_2019/ecld85q/ | 1548096389 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lbkulinski | t2_17799v | Awkward streams? And erased generics are a worthwhile compromise. One class file can represent all possible instantiations of `ArrayList`. | null | 0 | 1544563232 | False | 0 | ebl7gz1 | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebl7b8p | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebl7gz1/ | 1547487253 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | terbet | t2_278m1bw5 | > MIMXRT1050-EVK is discontinued, I think
Yeah, I thought that B is a revision of EVK or something, but for some reason I couldn't find it on the site and even google was like "Showing results for MIMXRT1050-EVK
Search instead for MIMXRT1050-EVKB" | null | 0 | 1545841756 | False | 0 | ecldeql | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_ecl512x | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/ecldeql/ | 1548096471 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
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