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 | kudah | t2_af6th | So French has two words for "programmer" then? | null | 0 | 1544631232 | False | 0 | ebmyg8x | t3_a55qhp | null | null | t1_ebk115c | /r/programming/comments/a55qhp/the_dart_language_considers_adding_sound/ebmyg8x/ | 1547516690 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | p13t3rm | t2_3aamn | VS Code is the exception. | null | 0 | 1545924832 | False | 0 | ecnvk52 | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t1_ecmp9yz | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecnvk52/ | 1548138640 | -1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | combinatorylogic | t2_iab4d | Nope, I read it very carefully. Not a single time the actual *reason* for having abstractions was mentioned. And, of course, the right way of thinking about abstractions was not mentioned either - not a word on a *linguistic* abstraction and on deriving your abstractions from your problem domains, not from the lower levels of code. Even the language the author is using - "to abstract over the effect monad" and so on demonstrates a completely backwards approach.
| null | 0 | 1544631384 | False | 0 | ebmyndf | t3_a57fby | null | null | t1_ebmy707 | /r/programming/comments/a57fby/the_complexity_trap/ebmyndf/ | 1547516780 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | rainbow7564 | t2_m4wa2 | Too spherical, you need sharper corners. | null | 0 | 1545924909 | False | 0 | ecnvo2g | t3_a9qz9q | null | null | t1_ecn64gt | /r/programming/comments/a9qz9q/amoeba_finds_approximate_solutions_to_nphard/ecnvo2g/ | 1548138689 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | PaulieMcPaulson | t2_1cvp9wnn | I am a total noob to reddit and programming so can someone please tell me how i can post the rest of the screenshots?? | null | 0 | 1544631411 | False | 0 | ebmyol8 | t3_a5jjm6 | null | null | t3_a5jjm6 | /r/programming/comments/a5jjm6/c_need_help_printing_out_the_highest_score/ebmyol8/ | 1547516795 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | singularineet | t2_8yohb | ingition | null | 0 | 1545924938 | False | 0 | ecnvphz | t3_a9yxp6 | null | null | t1_ecnkrdn | /r/programming/comments/a9yxp6/gitbatch_manage_all_of_your_git_repositories_in/ecnvphz/ | 1548138706 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Fingoltin | t2_ler4a | WSL doesn't support any kind of GUI does it? | null | 0 | 1544631455 | False | 0 | ebmyqou | t3_a5hkyo | null | null | t1_ebmxrbx | /r/programming/comments/a5hkyo/investigating_an_early2010s_gaming_drm_system_or/ebmyqou/ | 1547516821 | 10 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | warchestorc | t2_aitruty | I would strongly recommend never doing a rewrite ever again. You just have a bunch of people rewriting a system with bad documentation and a lack of domain experts in most cases. Horrible experience. | null | 0 | 1545925005 | False | 0 | ecnvsv5 | t3_a9p2o8 | null | null | t1_ecl6y2o | /r/programming/comments/a9p2o8/that_one_time_a_green_fields_project_worked_out/ecnvsv5/ | 1548138748 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lbkulinski | t2_17799v | Just because C# added features along the way does not me it isn’t based off of Java. It’s like Windows getting inspiration from macOS.
And you keep throwing around how you can “port a 10000 kloc java codebase into a 1000 loc C# codebase”. That may be true, but the real question is how comprehensible will that codebase be? Reading code is more important that writing code, and while it may be easy to express the same thing in a shorter way in C#, that doesn’t mean it will be as comprehensible to readers of your code like the longer Java version is.
The architects do realize that there is some ceremony in the Java language, and [Project Amber](https://openjdk.java.net/projects/amber/) has been taking a look at that. | null | 0 | 1544631506 | False | 0 | ebmyt20 | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebmxhsj | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebmyt20/ | 1547516851 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | basic_man | t2_2piw1ukk | Agreed | null | 0 | 1545925384 | False | 0 | ecnwe18 | t3_a9yxp6 | null | null | t1_ecnsnbn | /r/programming/comments/a9yxp6/gitbatch_manage_all_of_your_git_repositories_in/ecnwe18/ | 1548139010 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ivquatch | t2_3a6gu | > not a word on a linguistic abstraction and on deriving your abstractions from your problem domains
I think he touched on this when he started discussing bounded contexts and the larger issue of suboptimal business processes/organisation, no? | null | 0 | 1544631602 | False | 0 | ebmyxj9 | t3_a57fby | null | null | t1_ebmyndf | /r/programming/comments/a57fby/the_complexity_trap/ebmyxj9/ | 1547516906 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | exorxor | t2_h57gcb9 | When Windows Update installs an update (aka an upgrade) and it breaks your machine, if you want Microsoft to fix it, you need to pay. As such, I do not consider Windows a "product". It's just a liability that could break at any time. Certainly in a business environment, that's the last thing you want.
As such, you are evidently either a retard or a shill. | null | 0 | 1545925644 | False | 0 | ecnwsmk | t3_a9i9ij | null | null | t1_ecl2tgb | /r/programming/comments/a9i9ij/microsoft_had_another_year_of_big_opensource/ecnwsmk/ | 1548139220 | -3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | XANi_ | t2_7z5jp | I used it before they force added it but still that was dumbfuck idea, doubly so for company that uses "freedom" as their main marketing buzzword.
"Freedom, except for stuff we forcibly shove down your ass, you dont have choice there. Or lube"
| null | 0 | 1544631634 | False | 0 | ebmyz0g | t3_a5bwkl | null | null | t1_ebmnvdz | /r/programming/comments/a5bwkl/firefox_developer_edition/ebmyz0g/ | 1547516924 | -5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lapishelper | t2_8fpla | How does that compare to Typora? | null | 0 | 1545925704 | False | 0 | ecnwvxy | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t3_a9tm4z | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecnwvxy/ | 1548139261 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | biggestidiotever2 | t2_2k15llz0 | Actually, it does. Microsoft is even going to integrate an X server into Windows. You can run your own X server for now. | null | 0 | 1544631643 | False | 0 | ebmyzes | t3_a5hkyo | null | null | t1_ebmyqou | /r/programming/comments/a5hkyo/investigating_an_early2010s_gaming_drm_system_or/ebmyzes/ | 1547516929 | 32 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | rainbow7564 | t2_m4wa2 | 1. That's not what I said, and 2. anyone who has dealt with transitive dependencies before knows what I'm talking about. This isn't something that "flies in the face of broadly accepted concepts." | null | 0 | 1545925778 | False | 0 | ecnx04k | t3_a9q0uh | null | null | t1_ecnuewd | /r/programming/comments/a9q0uh/write_code_that_is_easy_to_delete_not_easy_to/ecnx04k/ | 1548139312 | -1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | andrewsutton | t2_dgrqz | Yeah... I also missed the "contract" part in your earlier response.
​ | null | 0 | 1544631706 | False | 0 | ebmz2ca | t3_a56am1 | null | null | t1_ebm82b8 | /r/programming/comments/a56am1/whats_the_deal_with_the_solid_principles_part_2/ebmz2ca/ | 1547516965 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | MineralPlunder | t2_amu2j | Typora calls itself a "What You See Is What You Mean"(WYSIWYM), which makes sense as it's all Markdown, just with live preview. WYSIWYG(example: MS Word) is just a sucky paradigm.
In the case of Notable, not being WYSIWYG is not exactly a feature of editor itself, but rather of the fact it implements Markdown.
Vim with syntax highlighting and Notable(if I understand it right) have a different way of giving feedback from Typora. Typora has what I'd call "generating a live website", whereas Vim and Notable give a special visual highlight while pushing the characters to the screen when they have special meaning in markdown's syntax. Vim and Notable don't hide the plaintext that drives it all. | null | 0 | 1545925863 | False | 0 | ecnx4xf | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t1_ecnb0yg | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecnx4xf/ | 1548139371 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | icantthinkofone | t2_38m87 | A head hunter told me that they have two or three large companies that are interested in Go developers but the Go people they have are really into Go so you have to come in knowing your stuff. | null | 0 | 1544631709 | False | 0 | ebmz2h2 | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebmxpi9 | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebmz2h2/ | 1547516967 | 15 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | FlashyQpt | t2_qb3s93g | That highly depends on the industry and I can't think of any area that is "20 years behind" | null | 0 | 1545925912 | False | 0 | ecnx7p9 | t3_a9z26i | null | null | t1_ecnvfhq | /r/programming/comments/a9z26i/comparison_of_the_top_speech_processing_apis/ecnx7p9/ | 1548139405 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | cowardlydragon | t2_d0po | I agree. Did this article ever get around to showing composition mechanics of Kotlin? Are there mixins or some sort of templating? How do they resolve diamond problems, conflicting names/namespaces/signatures?
​
​ | null | 0 | 1544631749 | False | 0 | ebmz4db | t3_a5gd84 | null | null | t1_ebmenw6 | /r/programming/comments/a5gd84/why_can_inheritance_be_dangerous_check_the/ebmz4db/ | 1547517015 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HosonZes | t2_3yzdl | Cheetah is described as cross platform and windows is supported but the github repo does only provide a *.so file? How is it designed to work on windows?
While I will certainly try it on some small hardware devices, getting it to work on a (windows) desktop machine would be nice. | null | 0 | 1545925945 | False | 0 | ecnx9lx | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_ecl6a4s | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/ecnx9lx/ | 1548139429 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | maratango | t2_19gxgval | You can run a Windows X server like Xming. | null | 0 | 1544631796 | False | 0 | ebmz6jo | t3_a5hkyo | null | null | t1_ebmyqou | /r/programming/comments/a5hkyo/investigating_an_early2010s_gaming_drm_system_or/ebmz6jo/ | 1547517043 | 10 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Deathisfatal | t2_50ntj | Bad bot | null | 0 | 1545925946 | False | 0 | ecnx9ng | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t1_ecmx2y5 | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecnx9ng/ | 1548139430 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | gruntbatch | t2_mojrk | It's actually possible. You run an X server on windows itself, and configure WSL to communicate with that server to render the UI. [I've never done it myself, but here's one tutorial, from googling.](https://virtualizationreview.com/articles/2017/02/08/graphical-programs-on-windows-subsystem-on-linux.aspx) | null | 0 | 1544631850 | False | 0 | ebmz90m | t3_a5hkyo | null | null | t1_ebmyqou | /r/programming/comments/a5hkyo/investigating_an_early2010s_gaming_drm_system_or/ebmz90m/ | 1547517073 | 12 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | icarebot | t2_2n5al08x | I am sorry human being :( | null | 0 | 1545925950 | False | 0 | ecnx9xy | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t1_ecnx9ng | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecnx9xy/ | 1548139434 | -2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | alexmojaki | t2_930vx | Sounds like a good source of comedy material.
I'm not really worried that there'll be a flood of such posts that I can't moderate and my life will be ruined. The sidebar specifically and repeatedly says that's not what the sub is for. If people choose to ignore it, that's their problem. | null | 0 | 1544632036 | False | 0 | ebmzhpo | t3_a5iecw | null | null | t1_ebmwm5t | /r/programming/comments/a5iecw/new_subreddit_for_small_coding_tasks_done_for/ebmzhpo/ | 1547517180 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | GaianNeuron | t2_8njru | VSCode makes itself exceptional by being indispensable. The featureset is simply worth the tradeoff of memory use.
Much like Visual Studio itself, tbh... | null | 0 | 1545925995 | False | 0 | ecnxcgv | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t1_ecnvk52 | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecnxcgv/ | 1548139464 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | snowe2010 | t2_53c7i | I don't understand why this necessitates JavaScript. I use Jekyll just fine with markdown and no JavaScript. | null | 0 | 1544632053 | False | 0 | ebmzigz | t3_a5cm5c | null | null | t1_ebmek86 | /r/programming/comments/a5cm5c/people_who_disagree_with_you_arent_trying_to_make/ebmzigz/ | 1547517189 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | hdayi | t2_2pbgsj8o | Loved it | null | 0 | 1545926035 | False | 0 | ecnxerb | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t3_a9tm4z | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecnxerb/ | 1548139493 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | The main issues I have with inheritance is lack of separation between behavior and structure, and of name-spacing. Composition and interfaces/traits/protocols/multi-methods side step these issues, which to me is worth more than the convenience. But calling inheritance dangerous isn't really helping anyone; living is dangerous, get over it. | null | 0 | 1544632173 | False | 0 | ebmzo2h | t3_a5gd84 | null | null | t3_a5gd84 | /r/programming/comments/a5gd84/why_can_inheritance_be_dangerous_check_the/ebmzo2h/ | 1547517259 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Beefin | t2_4n1lp | Been using the Google Cloud Speech API for my podcast transcribing project: https://github.com/esteininger/Podcast-Word-Cloud
It's been great so far, only issue is limit on 60 sec per transcription and .flac format requirement for audio files. Not a huge deal since ffmpeg is a good unix library for separating/transcoding. | null | 0 | 1545926091 | False | 0 | ecnxhw0 | t3_a9z26i | null | null | t3_a9z26i | /r/programming/comments/a9z26i/comparison_of_the_top_speech_processing_apis/ecnxhw0/ | 1548139532 | 55 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | PrimozDelux | t2_lost9eb | They sent people to the moon with code stored by threading wire [through copper rings.](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Core_rope_memory) It is in fact possible to write code without bricoleuring, even today. | null | 0 | 1544632201 | False | 0 | ebmzpeg | t3_a55qhp | null | null | t1_ebmyg8x | /r/programming/comments/a55qhp/the_dart_language_considers_adding_sound/ebmzpeg/ | 1547517275 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | neuk_mijn_oogkas | t2_2032avqr | > The CoC. It's not always remembered, but the CoC does not just talk about social justice and harassment and so forth. It also lays out boundaries around the signal:noise ratio in conversation, the use of other people's attention and time, and the need to accept tradeoffs (I wish I'd had the foresight to use the term "zero-sum" here because I should have: not every decision is non-zero-sum).
Maybe it should stick to the latter part then and only concern itself with signal-to-noise because I find all these other parts to being pretentious and contradicting itself like the whole "zero tolerance for sexism.. but female nipples are treated differently from male nipples in our nudity enforcement" and that kind of stuff or how ageism is perfectly acceptable weirdly enough. | null | 1 | 1545926105 | False | 0 | ecnxiop | t3_a9swiz | null | null | t3_a9swiz | /r/programming/comments/a9swiz/rust_2019_and_beyond_limits_to_some_growth/ecnxiop/ | 1548139541 | -3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | m50d | t2_6q02y | I mean I want to be able to get the markdown in the served page over http. Maybe there's a way to make github pages expose the "source" markdown alongside the page, but this was easier. | null | 0 | 1544632266 | False | 0 | ebmzsh4 | t3_a5cm5c | null | null | t1_ebmzigz | /r/programming/comments/a5cm5c/people_who_disagree_with_you_arent_trying_to_make/ebmzsh4/ | 1547517313 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HellfireOwner | t2_2juz5fhu | /r/tired_old_jokes | null | 0 | 1545926445 | False | 0 | ecny1mi | t3_a9qz9q | null | null | t1_ecnr721 | /r/programming/comments/a9qz9q/amoeba_finds_approximate_solutions_to_nphard/ecny1mi/ | 1548139805 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jacob-jackson | t2_v7vmd | Yep, please send me a private message with your email. | null | 0 | 1544632356 | False | 0 | ebmzwoz | t3_a58r3e | null | null | t1_ebmgaun | /r/programming/comments/a58r3e/tabnines_first_month_in_review/ebmzwoz/ | 1547517366 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HellfireOwner | t2_2juz5fhu | All that is gold *surely* glitters...just may be covered in muck temporarily ;) | null | 0 | 1545926606 | False | 0 | ecnyahg | t3_a9qz9q | null | null | t1_ecn6ifp | /r/programming/comments/a9qz9q/amoeba_finds_approximate_solutions_to_nphard/ecnyahg/ | 1548139914 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | cowardlydragon | t2_d0po | Almost all of those were defeated by usenet groups from that time.
​
Most DRM in the 1990s was the game manual or some wheel thing.
What games in particular? | null | 0 | 1544632452 | False | 0 | ebn016q | t3_a5hkyo | null | null | t1_ebmxrbx | /r/programming/comments/a5hkyo/investigating_an_early2010s_gaming_drm_system_or/ebn016q/ | 1547517421 | 41 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mcgruntman | t2_3i3fv | Cool idea! | null | 0 | 1545926621 | False | 0 | ecnybag | t3_a9z26i | null | null | t1_ecnxhw0 | /r/programming/comments/a9z26i/comparison_of_the_top_speech_processing_apis/ecnybag/ | 1548139924 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | malstank | t2_54f1o | I would assume that a majority of developers that have experience in Go probably got it from Google? That might explain it a bit. | null | 0 | 1544632518 | False | 0 | ebn0469 | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebmvs73 | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebn0469/ | 1547517458 | -2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HellfireOwner | t2_2juz5fhu | Oh, you want me to drop down a notch because you don't like and because your friends don't know how to handle their issues? Not a chance, kid.
While you sit there thinking I should 'chill out'...I am making moves, landing new deals/clients...building my fucking empire...solo, because the rest of the world is asleep. | null | 0 | 1545926712 | False | 0 | ecnyg9n | t3_a9qz9q | null | null | t1_ecn288g | /r/programming/comments/a9qz9q/amoeba_finds_approximate_solutions_to_nphard/ecnyg9n/ | 1548139985 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | sky-reader | t2_1sy5scw8 | This is a pretty good reverse engineering write-up. Also crosspost to r/Reverseengineering | null | 0 | 1544632538 | False | 0 | ebn051t | t3_a5hkyo | null | null | t3_a5hkyo | /r/programming/comments/a5hkyo/investigating_an_early2010s_gaming_drm_system_or/ebn051t/ | 1547517469 | 19 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | sfjacob | t2_12x65t | Posting an electron app in /r/programming? Brave man. Congrats on the app, looks great! | null | 0 | 1545926770 | False | 0 | ecnyjcf | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t3_a9tm4z | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecnyjcf/ | 1548140024 | 9 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | eliasv | t2_786hb | Apologies, perhaps I was unclear. It's permitting the choice of *arbitrary* delimiters which I find ugly. I think the proposed *variable-length* delimiter, or something similar, would be a fine strategy. It's so easy to provide a mechanism to delimit any possible string without muddying the syntax with weird arbitrary *alphanumeric punctuation*.
Personally I think the nicest strategy is to surround the quotes with an equal-length sequence of some special character, e.g.
`String s1 = #"Here is some "text" containing quotes"#;`
`String s2 = ##"Here is a closing delimiter: "# It is ignored!"##;` | null | 0 | 1544632594 | False | 0 | ebn07m6 | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebmyd4c | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebn07m6/ | 1547517600 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1545926830 | 1546539182 | 0 | ecnymg8 | t3_a9z26i | null | null | t1_ecnvfhq | /r/programming/comments/a9z26i/comparison_of_the_top_speech_processing_apis/ecnymg8/ | 1548140062 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | the_evergrowing_fool | t2_tenb6 | We are not talking about sharing code across many runtimes, but one. Via no less than worthless general purpose languages with insignificant differences between them. Which is why I dim the idea as worthless and unjustifiable. | null | 0 | 1544632820 | 1544633123 | 0 | ebn0iba | t3_a55qhp | null | null | t1_ebmvbio | /r/programming/comments/a55qhp/the_dart_language_considers_adding_sound/ebn0iba/ | 1547517733 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Denommus | t2_6dn9s | Java is strictly worse to c# in every possible way. | null | 1 | 1545926836 | False | 0 | ecnympw | t3_a9q0uh | null | null | t1_ecmfq5h | /r/programming/comments/a9q0uh/write_code_that_is_easy_to_delete_not_easy_to/ecnympw/ | 1548140066 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Shinosha | t2_bja0o | What I meant was that the fact Java will get these features is not enough for me to enjoy using it. Mostly because they don't provide any edge over other JVM languages since they'll also get them eventually. On the other hand other languages do have *exclusive* features *in relation* to Java
In addition, Java's functional features are currently non-existent or unpleasant to deal with (e.g: Stream API, Optional, functions as first class citizens). About the pattern matching, the two JEPs you linked provide very basic stuff compared to what Scala can do. Java still has some catch-up to do in that regard and I think quite a few release cycles. | null | 0 | 1544632824 | 1544633492 | 0 | ebn0ijc | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebmw7r5 | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebn0ijc/ | 1547517735 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HellfireOwner | t2_2juz5fhu | Well, I would make the distinction as to why the code is being thrown out...
Sometimes code gets outdated. Maybe a better solution comes along or an update that is not backwards compatible, and then it must be replaced.
However, there is another type of throw away code...code that was so junky, confusing, and useless that it is better that it does not exist...yet, sometimes must be forced to continue to exist (think of all the terrible legacy code at Facebook and Google...lol)...that type of throw-away code can be regulated through planning, good planning. | null | 0 | 1545926980 | False | 0 | ecnyu2l | t3_a9q0uh | null | null | t1_ecmxxrg | /r/programming/comments/a9q0uh/write_code_that_is_easy_to_delete_not_easy_to/ecnyu2l/ | 1548140157 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mojomonkeyfish | t2_71i1r | Never write code in any language, because somebody is biased against all of them. | null | 0 | 1544632859 | False | 0 | ebn0k4i | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebmvs73 | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebn0k4i/ | 1547517755 | 72 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | MineralPlunder | t2_amu2j | Not everyone uses vim/emacs, or even an editor that is (0.1)^10 times as comfy as those eternal titans, not to mention be proficient in the use of such mythical weapons as to write everything with them. | null | 0 | 1545927058 | False | 0 | ecnyxsl | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t1_ecn9uiy | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecnyxsl/ | 1548140202 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Izacus | t2_36zg1 | I always liked the physical button thing on Chromebook Pixels. | null | 0 | 1544632954 | False | 0 | ebn0okz | t3_a585nb | null | null | t1_ebmmdbf | /r/programming/comments/a585nb/cryptography_failure_leads_to_easy_hacking_for/ebn0okz/ | 1547517816 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HellfireOwner | t2_2juz5fhu | > dodecahedron
I'm an icosahedron that always lands on 20. | null | 0 | 1545927180 | False | 0 | ecnz3kt | t3_a9qz9q | null | null | t1_ecn64gt | /r/programming/comments/a9qz9q/amoeba_finds_approximate_solutions_to_nphard/ecnz3kt/ | 1548140273 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HalibetLector | t2_17d4bn | Nuh uh. ;) | null | 0 | 1544633137 | False | 0 | ebn0x7y | t3_a56m8z | null | null | t1_ebl7x4i | /r/programming/comments/a56m8z/unit_testing_antipatterns_full_list/ebn0x7y/ | 1547517923 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Irriteer-Beer | t2_1ug2rlmz | Tarded | null | 0 | 1545927199 | False | 0 | ecnz4iu | t3_a9zyp3 | null | null | t1_ecnud3v | /r/programming/comments/a9zyp3/thoughts_on_rust_in_2019/ecnz4iu/ | 1548140285 | -36 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | webauteur | t2_11nmd | We are upvoting it into the cloud, the clouds of heaven. | null | 0 | 1544633472 | False | 0 | ebn1cwa | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebmrsek | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebn1cwa/ | 1547518116 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | m0dev | t2_sxtkd | I was always thinking "How nice it would be to have this thing just done automatically" :)
Is the source available on github? | null | 0 | 1545927245 | False | 0 | ecnz6r5 | t3_a9ztxf | null | null | t3_a9ztxf | /r/programming/comments/a9ztxf/personal_photo_management_using_tensorflow/ecnz6r5/ | 1548140312 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | biggestidiotever2 | t2_2k15llz0 | Is there an open source securom service that allows playing of securom DRM games such as Civ III and many, many more? | null | 0 | 1544633509 | False | 0 | ebn1eoq | t3_a5hkyo | null | null | t1_ebn016q | /r/programming/comments/a5hkyo/investigating_an_early2010s_gaming_drm_system_or/ebn1eoq/ | 1547518138 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Determinant | t2_3fmrp | How's Kotlin support in NetBeans? Is Kotlin support in NetBeans better than Eclipse?
I'm only asking because all my back-end development is in Kotlin now (with IntelliJ) and it's nice to have options to choose from. | null | 0 | 1545927440 | False | 0 | ecnzgid | t3_aa05by | null | null | t3_aa05by | /r/programming/comments/aa05by/netbeans_100_released/ecnzgid/ | 1548140463 | 33 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | Right, as if they would suddenly wake up one day and crave playing lotteries; gambling is quite obviously the last thing Africa needs.
Startups in general make me puke, cryptocurrency startups add insult to injury. Cryptocurrency lottery startups squeezing third world countries for awesome profits is as good as it gets. I mean, where do you go from there? | null | 0 | 1544633540 | False | 0 | ebn1g5j | t3_a5h57h | null | null | t1_ebmgws2 | /r/programming/comments/a5h57h/why_did_they_decide_to_carry_out_their_activities/ebn1g5j/ | 1547518156 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | BezierPatch | t2_c70er | Except org-mode is a nightmare to use well unless you want to spend half your time learning how to write lisp.
And the other half trying to remember convoluted keyboard shortcuts. | null | 0 | 1545927500 | False | 0 | ecnzji3 | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t1_ecnmh55 | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecnzji3/ | 1548140500 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | osztyapenko | t2_xmfs7 | I think you misunderstand the parent poster, consider the following:
if(p1) { do_stuff(); }
if(p2) { do_other_stuff(); }
Now if you have a test where p1 is true and p2 is false and another where p1 is false and p2 is true you have 100% test coverage, but you never tested p1 true and p2 true or p1 false and p2 false, and bugs might hide there in your 100% test coverage code. | null | 0 | 1544633637 | False | 0 | ebn1ksg | t3_a5iior | null | null | t1_ebmwnuq | /r/programming/comments/a5iior/tests_wont_make_your_software_correct/ebn1ksg/ | 1547518238 | 24 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | another_dudeman | t2_fv3hg | Are you talking about package management, OOP encapsulation, or something else? Also, your #2 still doesn't explain the issue and makes it seem to me you don't understand the challenge enough to explain it. | null | 0 | 1545927561 | 1545927897 | 0 | ecnzmhc | t3_a9q0uh | null | null | t1_ecnx04k | /r/programming/comments/a9q0uh/write_code_that_is_easy_to_delete_not_easy_to/ecnzmhc/ | 1548140536 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | kevinherron | t2_3821f | *from an outsider who dipped his toes into the marketing side of a sales driven tech company and then got out. | null | 0 | 1544633737 | False | 0 | ebn1pji | t3_a5i8w0 | null | null | t3_a5i8w0 | /r/programming/comments/a5i8w0/the_truth_about_tech_from_an_insider_who_got_out/ebn1pji/ | 1547518296 | 15 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | crabbone | t2_e3qdk15 | > When is it OK to use goto?
When all you have is an MS Windows batch file.
Or udev rules (I actually think they might have been inspired by cmd.exe). | null | 0 | 1545927565 | False | 0 | ecnzmok | t3_a9sscm | null | null | t3_a9sscm | /r/programming/comments/a9sscm/when_is_it_ok_to_use_goto/ecnzmok/ | 1548140539 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | vyp298 | t2_1mpjnjw4 | You could have the code require a key to access. Put a cryptographically hashed version of the key in the code. That type of backdoor would probably be apparent to anyone looking at the source and be really easy to take out though. | null | 0 | 1544633788 | False | 0 | ebn1rzr | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_ebmdf3g | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebn1rzr/ | 1547518328 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | pmst | t2_oicm5 | Love this! | null | 0 | 1545927694 | False | 0 | ecnzt0m | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t3_a9tm4z | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecnzt0m/ | 1548140617 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bad_at_photosharp | t2_6zae0 | Software Developers - called "devs"...
​
Is that meant to be derisive? | null | 0 | 1544633850 | False | 0 | ebn1urk | t3_a5i8w0 | null | null | t3_a5i8w0 | /r/programming/comments/a5i8w0/the_truth_about_tech_from_an_insider_who_got_out/ebn1urk/ | 1547518362 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | c-smile | t2_ue34p | > No WYSIWYG
Markdown is a WYSIWYG, poor man emulation of it, but still it is a form of WYSIWYG.
Yet it would be interesting to compare resource needed to run this application. Note takers are so called aside applications - used occasionally.
They either run at startup - in this case they shall consume as little RAM as possible, or they shall start fast to be useful.
So the comparison table shall include runtime metrics too.
You can try to compare with my Sciter.Notes ( https://notes.sciter.com ) for that matter. | null | 0 | 1545927728 | False | 0 | ecnzupv | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t3_a9tm4z | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecnzupv/ | 1548140638 | -1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | gabeech | t2_7wazm | > but without detailing what tests these programmers are undertaking
Exactly, especially if the test doesn't provide an IDE that has all the bells and whistles like property/function completion and hinting, and inline documentation a la Intellisense. That would also explain why the Vim and Emacs devs are doing better, they probably have more of the mundane things like function calls and definitions memorized vs a dev that leans on Intellisense. | null | 0 | 1544633903 | False | 0 | ebn1x72 | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebmv765 | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebn1x72/ | 1547518392 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | tonefart | t2_ywdx0 | Fuck off spam article. | null | 0 | 1545927754 | False | 0 | ecnzw16 | t3_a9zssn | null | null | t3_a9zssn | /r/programming/comments/a9zssn/hidden_advantages_of_cross_platform_mobile_app/ecnzw16/ | 1548140654 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | JimBoonie69 | t2_8ikv1 | VI / Emacs ... a cut above haha. What about if you use pycharm but with VI mode enabled!?!? So of my co-workers have moved onto VSCode . To be honest i dont give a rats ass. I use plain terminal VI for many things unless i'm getting deep into a session. Then i fire up my IDE , let it chew up 10 GB of RAM for some ungodly reason, and write my code in VI mode | null | 0 | 1544634090 | False | 0 | ebn265x | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t3_a5i57x | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebn265x/ | 1547518503 | -11 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | deliciouspuppy | t2_tm7ro | you absolutely need to include the time it takes to build the device. this "penalty" exists in algorithms also. for example, let's say you have an algo that counts how many of each letter an input string contains. well you would go through the string and toss them in a hash table. your hash table would give you a constant time answer. but your total algorithm is linear (length of string) - you can't just say 'well you can't count the time it took to build my hash table, since uh... i say so. therefore my algo is constant time!'
the reason why this matters is because your device is a fixed graph of nodes and edges. a shortest path algo on a FIXED size graph also can return shortest path in what effectively is a constant time (since you have made both nodes and edges a constant). just like your example. but as you know, algos are always considered as being able to handle inputs of varying and theoretically unlimited inputs, so what if the graph changes? well then our algo goes back to being whatever it is (E+V), (V2), etc. but your device must now add this new node and string - this is a very expensive operation of linear time per node (adding the node, and one string up to every node it is connected to). so your real life algo is not at all "constant time".
| null | 0 | 1545927789 | False | 0 | ecnzxvq | t3_a9qz9q | null | null | t1_ecnvfuh | /r/programming/comments/a9qz9q/amoeba_finds_approximate_solutions_to_nphard/ecnzxvq/ | 1548140677 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | vielga2 | t2_20robo | > That may be true, but the real question is how comprehensible will that codebase be?
The resulting C# is a million times more readable than the equivalent java, precisely because C# is a much more expressive language.
Also, I eliminated entire parts of the library which do things that are literally given in C# (such as a half-assed, buggy attempt at string interpolation), or being able to serialize/deserialize an `T<A, B>` to and from JSON, which is literally a single line of code in C#, versus a bunch of horrendous hacks in java. Also got rid of like 1500 loc due to the utter stupidity of getters/setters crap, versus real properties in C#.
> Project Amber
I see absolutely NOTHING of value in that, other than copying C# and Kotlin. **java is useless and has zero value.**
I'm still waiting for you to name ONE (1) feature of the java language that doesn't exist in C# and that didn't exist at least a decade ago.
| null | 0 | 1544634268 | False | 0 | ebn2efc | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebmyt20 | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebn2efc/ | 1547518605 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | RobbeSch | t2_r1cgz | It's been a while since I used GitBook. It was great to have multi-page notes. You can see my example here: https://robbeschepens.gitbooks.io/webapplicaties-3/content/
Only chapter 1 and 2 are filled in but it shows what GitBook is capable of.
It's also a full webapp, so you didn't have to download a desktop app but you can, optionally. | null | 0 | 1545927806 | False | 0 | ecnzyoc | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t1_ecn57s2 | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecnzyoc/ | 1548140688 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | combinatorylogic | t2_iab4d | Do your tests cover *all* possible combinations of input values of your "pure" functions? | null | 0 | 1544634400 | False | 0 | ebn2kkk | t3_a5iior | null | null | t1_ebmxx5s | /r/programming/comments/a5iior/tests_wont_make_your_software_correct/ebn2kkk/ | 1547518680 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | narwi | t2_7s32m | >Try representing the fraction 1/3 in a finite number of decimal places in base 10. You'll get something like 0.33333. Now try representing 2/3 the same way. You'll get something like 0.66667.
Well, no. Only if your represntation includes rounding, something you might not want to do. If you didn't, 1/3 + 1/3 would be 2/3 exactly. You "just" would have to deal with 0.9999... testing the same as 1. But if you did then 1/3+1/3+1/3 would be 1, as expected. | null | 0 | 1545927949 | False | 0 | eco05oy | t3_a9oey4 | null | null | t1_ecm4p63 | /r/programming/comments/a9oey4/do_developers_understand_ieee_floating_point/eco05oy/ | 1548140774 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | errorkode | t2_6liwt | > Any company that has to appeal to morality as a survival mechanism in this economy, especially when their competitors blatantly aren't, is essentially second rate.
I don't even know where to start with this...
Let's for a moment assume that companies do indeed work the way you seem to imagine. That is to say, any company is essentially an automaton with executives who aren't people but simple profit-automation systems. Even in that case, "appealing" to morality is an effective business strategy. Loads of people are completely willing to pay premium for perceived or real morality of their product. Think bio-labels, fair trade and clean energy. Tesla isn't just selling cars because they're cool, but also because it's customer feel good about helping save the climate (how legitimate that actually is when you buy a new car every year and jet around the world isn't usually considered).
That being said, this is not actually how the world works. To come back to reddit's darling, mister Musk: Was founding a rocket company from scratch a good idea? No, it wasn't. It was ideologically motivated and still is. No sane share holder would green-light projects like the BFR. So the company isn't selling shares and keeps investing in business plans to could tank the entire company.
Companies, as the name kind of implies, boil down to a group of people with a common goal. Those goals could be profit, but can just as well be to provide a service the company thinks is important for ideological reasons. Of course, we live in a capitalist system so at the end of the day you need money, but that doesn't need to mean profit.
> Like it or not, that's the world we live in, and businesses don't adopt moral policies because they think it's "the right thing" to do.
Except they do. Let's take another tech example: The Linux Foundation. Tell me it's not an ideologically motivated company. Of course, the entities sponsoring it are often doing so because they use Linux for profit or simply for good publicity. Where I agree with you is that most publicly held companies these days are purely motivated purely by profit. They will sometimes do the right thing, but only motivated by potential profit.
> Capitalism doesn't give two fucks about human beings, for better or worse.
Kinda unfortunately in today's climate, a lot of fucks are given about human beings. In the end it's always people who make and spend money. As such companies care about exploiting people, preferably without them knowing it. I think that might have been what you were trying to say, but still: Human beings are the beating heart of capitalism. Either as products, customers or workers.
> I agree this means very little.
> That's fine. My experience is the same, and I use it as a default in Linux as well. Still doesn't make what I'm saying invalid.
> Firefox is totally necessary, in the same sense that AMD is necessary. Both have done useful things, but neither are leading in their respective domains.
So you're saying they're equal, one is just more equal. It seems to me, either one is clearly superior (which you say Chrome is) *or* they're roughly equivalent (which you say they are).
> Everything is tracked on the Internet. If you use Google as a search engine, through duckduckgo or otherwise, they still know what you're viewing. Cookies are trivially read and updated everytime you visit Google. If you delete everything each time you exit, your IP is still logged.
I'm just assuming you tripped up in your sentence, because DuckDuckGo does not use Google. Anyway, I'm not stupid. But there are degrees. I mean you don't jump into a fire because you burnt your finger and now it doesn't matter anymore anyway.
My point was simply this: A browser can make it easier to harder for you to keep privacy intrusions to a minimum. Now, which browser do you trust more, the one developed by a company making more than 90% of their revenue via targeted ads, or the independent non-profit? Same reason iOS is better for privacy than your run of the mill Android setup: Apple wants to sell devices, Google wants to sell your data. Mozilla doesn't have a business model that revolves around gathering as much data about me as possible. That's the difference.
> I'm taking apart bullshit arguments and showing how their wrong.
If I may allow myself my own, regretful, snide remark: You're not doing a very good job.
> What nature values is clear.
Reproduction? It's kinda the only reason we exist if you want to argue on that level.
> It's perfectly reasonable to derive objective meaning from that alone.
Yes, I too like sex.
But seriously, neither of us arguing "objective" truth. We're arguing world views, ideology and economy. None of those topics are in the realm of objective facts or natural laws. | null | 0 | 1544634559 | 1544634818 | 0 | ebn2s46 | t3_a5bwkl | null | null | t1_ebmv05f | /r/programming/comments/a5bwkl/firefox_developer_edition/ebn2s46/ | 1547518802 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | narwi | t2_7s32m | A NaN is not equal to itself. Or for that matter, greater or equal than itself. | null | 0 | 1545928041 | False | 0 | eco0aao | t3_a9oey4 | null | null | t1_ecljayo | /r/programming/comments/a9oey4/do_developers_understand_ieee_floating_point/eco0aao/ | 1548140831 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | awesomefloss | t2_6lfei | Exactly. The toolchain used for building FreeBSD has been updated, but newer tools are available in ports. | null | 0 | 1544634617 | False | 0 | ebn2uw2 | t3_a5gxm6 | null | null | t1_ebmr1ad | /r/programming/comments/a5gxm6/freebsd_12_released/ebn2uw2/ | 1547518836 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | tending | t2_da6cc | What is an example where they are 20 years behind? | null | 0 | 1545928147 | False | 0 | eco0fj2 | t3_a9z26i | null | null | t1_ecnvfhq | /r/programming/comments/a9z26i/comparison_of_the_top_speech_processing_apis/eco0fj2/ | 1548140898 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jl2352 | t2_11g67p | My experience of development shops is they tend to either be all Windows, or all MacOS & Linux.
So if you code in C# it means .NET, and that means developing on Windows. Even with .NET Core, people still think Windows. If the place doesn't code on Windows, and you do, then they will look down on you. That is the reality of it.
There is quite a large anti-Microsoft bias in the industry. | null | 0 | 1544634634 | 1544645358 | 0 | ebn2vq6 | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebmvs73 | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebn2vq6/ | 1547518846 | 43 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | humoroushaxor | t2_extbe | Why the fuck does management have say in repository structure. Hope your teams have good versioning experience. | null | 0 | 1545928295 | False | 0 | eco0n44 | t3_a9yxp6 | null | null | t1_ecnsnbn | /r/programming/comments/a9yxp6/gitbatch_manage_all_of_your_git_repositories_in/eco0n44/ | 1548141020 | 50 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | MrStickmanPro1 | t2_eo5qu | The best thing that could happen would be if all companies threatened to fire every single employee working in australia.
Guess that would make them think it over again instantly - unless they want their whole economy to break apart. | null | 0 | 1544634644 | False | 0 | ebn2w7w | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_ebllklm | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebn2w7w/ | 1547518852 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | knyghtmare | t2_4fv26 | I was thinking along the same lines as BinaryIdiot actually, if you basically made a .zip archive with an .md document and any attachments inside and change the file extension you have a portable md file format that, at least, uses existing standards and doesn't really invent it's own.
But then... https://xkcd.com/927/ | null | 0 | 1545928823 | False | 0 | eco1di5 | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t1_ecn3u2b | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/eco1di5/ | 1548141345 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | tso | t2_37rbd | Just in time for the big Linux DEs to push Wayland... | null | 0 | 1544634659 | False | 0 | ebn2wvl | t3_a5hkyo | null | null | t1_ebmyzes | /r/programming/comments/a5hkyo/investigating_an_early2010s_gaming_drm_system_or/ebn2wvl/ | 1547518861 | 25 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bloody-albatross | t2_cdjk3 | They say it's the biggest conference. Not just hacker conference, but conference. (Note: compared with a convention it's still pretty small.) And they say the stuff that happens beside the talks is just as much reason to visit. Hacker spaces showing their stuff, lockpicking workshops etc.
I haven't been, but I was at a Chaos communication camp once. That is something very similar, but only ever 4 years and in the summer on a comping site. | null | 0 | 1545928838 | False | 0 | eco1e7h | t3_a9w87u | null | null | t1_ecn3uj5 | /r/programming/comments/a9w87u/the_35th_chaos_communication_congress_starts_in/eco1e7h/ | 1548141353 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bloody-albatross | t2_cdjk3 | What was the problem with FreeBSD 5.0? I'm a Linux user, so I don't know.
But I *do* know that OS X was based on 4.4BSD Lite plus the Mach micro kernel. FreeBSD is also based on 4.4BSD Lite. I think they did also copy paste some stuff from FreeBSD, but OS X was released 2 years before FreeBSD 5.0. | null | 0 | 1544634799 | False | 0 | ebn33ji | t3_a5gxm6 | null | null | t1_ebmom6g | /r/programming/comments/a5gxm6/freebsd_12_released/ebn33ji/ | 1547518942 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | wuphonsreach | t2_ortqx | We have a set of features in one of our projects that changes quarterly. Being able to just copy/paste a folder and start renaming things for the upcoming quarter works well. Makes it easier to retire the older quarters.
(There are business reasons that it's done this way with copy/paste for each new quarter.)
Everything else follows the normal convention of "all controllers here, all views there, all view models over yonder, all database models there". | null | 0 | 1545928874 | False | 0 | eco1g05 | t3_a9q0uh | null | null | t1_ecmec6q | /r/programming/comments/a9q0uh/write_code_that_is_easy_to_delete_not_easy_to/eco1g05/ | 1548141375 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jl2352 | t2_11g67p | > they probably have more of the mundane things like function calls and definitions memorized vs a dev that leans on Intellisense.
As a Vim user, I don't think this is true at all.
Vim has fuzzy code completion in built. For some projects this is actually all you need. It also has YouCompleteMe (and similar) which gives you full code completion. NeoVim has access to more, like language server plugins.
Emacs has simiar.
I would say Vim users tend to do more stuff on the command line. Command line can find a lot of this information for you in a project. | null | 0 | 1544634844 | False | 0 | ebn35px | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebn1x72 | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebn35px/ | 1547518969 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | perduraadastra | t2_tpogl | This writeup is lacking substance. I need to incorporate a speech to text in an app soon, and I'm still going to have to write sample apps with all these APIs to see which one is best. | null | 0 | 1545928890 | False | 0 | eco1grx | t3_a9z26i | null | null | t3_a9z26i | /r/programming/comments/a9z26i/comparison_of_the_top_speech_processing_apis/eco1grx/ | 1548141385 | 20 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lbkulinski | t2_17799v | C# doesn’t support wildcards. Nor does it support constants, `default` methods, `static` methods, or `private` methods in interfaces.
Now don’t go telling me that C# will be getting them soon, and so it “doesn’t count”. Java had them before C#. They essentially copied the semantics from Java. | null | 0 | 1544634846 | False | 0 | ebn35so | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebn2efc | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebn35so/ | 1547518970 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Slxe | t2_4dgsm | I agree with you for the most part, and this is actually one of the reasons (beyond the syntax) that I decided to stay away from Rust. CoC's are just a way for this cult to extend it's control. That being said, Rust comes from Mozilla, which is completely overrun by this stuff, so what did you expect?
I've personally never understood why you need more rules than:
- Don't be a dick
- Attack the code, not the coder
This has worked great in the communities I've been part of for decades, but apparently we need to cause fake outrage to control things and blame people even more. ¯\\_(ツ)_/¯
Things were better when we didn't care about what sex or gender someone was, and only cared about personality and merit. Why can't we go back to that? | null | 1 | 1545928934 | False | 0 | eco1ix5 | t3_a9swiz | null | null | t1_ecnhzkl | /r/programming/comments/a9swiz/rust_2019_and_beyond_limits_to_some_growth/eco1ix5/ | 1548141411 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | swordglowsblue | t2_2nrkh5d0 | Given time, I myself could answer all those questions fairly easily. The article, however, does not. To their credit, they do show the `by` keyword... once, in a code example, with no direct explanation of what it does. | null | 0 | 1544634862 | False | 0 | ebn36iq | t3_a5gd84 | null | null | t1_ebmz4db | /r/programming/comments/a5gd84/why_can_inheritance_be_dangerous_check_the/ebn36iq/ | 1547518979 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HellfireOwner | t2_2juz5fhu | I'm willing to take a whack at it ;) | null | 0 | 1545929033 | False | 0 | eco1nva | t3_a9w87u | null | null | t1_ecnbtt1 | /r/programming/comments/a9w87u/the_35th_chaos_communication_congress_starts_in/eco1nva/ | 1548141472 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | supercyberlurker | t2_wg1d4 | After enough interviews, you realize half of it is just gambling.
That is, you're not *really* dealing with people who are completely objectively evaluating your skills based on rational criteria garnered from the coding questions.
You're much more likely dealing with people just confirming their pre-existing biases and prejudices. That's almost even fair, since they are really testing to see if they could stand being around you.
The gamble is on culture-fit. | null | 0 | 1544634926 | False | 0 | ebn39px | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebmvs73 | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebn39px/ | 1547519018 | 100 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | shoutouttmud | t2_kwaaj | Seriously, this was pure trash | null | 0 | 1545929081 | False | 0 | eco1q63 | t3_a9q0uh | null | null | t1_ecmvz3w | /r/programming/comments/a9q0uh/write_code_that_is_easy_to_delete_not_easy_to/eco1q63/ | 1548141500 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 0987654231 | t2_1gy6bm | Obviously not but at least you can use some equivalent of quickcheck.
I was careful to say it mitigates the issue not that it solves it. | null | 0 | 1544634945 | False | 0 | ebn3amf | t3_a5iior | null | null | t1_ebn2kkk | /r/programming/comments/a5iior/tests_wont_make_your_software_correct/ebn3amf/ | 1547519030 | 11 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | fabiospampinato | t2_39cbq7 | I'm kind of doing this already with the tutorial notes, they are packed using `tar` and unpacked in your data directory. The only problem with that is that if you have multiple notes/attachments with the same name they will get overwritten. | null | 0 | 1545929123 | False | 0 | eco1s8q | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t1_eco1di5 | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/eco1s8q/ | 1548141526 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
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