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|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
False | magnora7 | t2_mddsa | I spent the last month coding the html and css for this new mobile interface at m.saidit.net and I was looking for some feedback about possible ways to improve it that I could implement. | null | 0 | 1544643460 | False | 0 | ebnf00o | t3_a5lhnh | null | null | t3_a5lhnh | /r/programming/comments/a5lhnh/saiditnet_now_has_a_mobile_interface_looking_for/ebnf00o/ | 1547524514 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | greenthumble | t2_8ebq0 | You are the one who walked into the thread with his bullshit I'm just calling you out on it, idiot. | null | 0 | 1545936977 | False | 0 | ecobjtt | t3_a9qz9q | null | null | t1_ecobe3m | /r/programming/comments/a9qz9q/amoeba_finds_approximate_solutions_to_nphard/ecobjtt/ | 1548146102 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | cl_bwoy | t2_kdblnxz | Came to see my favourite Zelda character dancing. Dissapointed now | null | 0 | 1544643479 | False | 0 | ebnf0yr | t3_a5kk6b | null | null | t1_ebn7uc2 | /r/programming/comments/a5kk6b/donald_knuths_24th_annual_christmas_lecture/ebnf0yr/ | 1547524525 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | takinashi | t2_ah3sr | feel free to open an issue about this! I am welcome to feature requests. And, I think, graphing is not a hard feature. If it is a requested feature from several people I will happily add. cheers. | null | 0 | 1545937006 | False | 0 | ecobl51 | t3_a9yxp6 | null | null | t1_eco6y4u | /r/programming/comments/a9yxp6/gitbatch_manage_all_of_your_git_repositories_in/ecobl51/ | 1548146118 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HalibetLector | t2_17d4bn | > Emacs and VIM are popular with people who went to school in the 90s thus currently have 20+years of experience.
I learned emacs in 2008. vim in 2010. Nice try, though. | null | 0 | 1544643497 | False | 0 | ebnf1tq | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebn4mt8 | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebnf1tq/ | 1547524536 | -9 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HellfireOwner | t2_2juz5fhu | Not a single bit of it was bullshit, moron. | null | 0 | 1545937021 | False | 0 | ecoblr3 | t3_a9qz9q | null | null | t1_ecobjtt | /r/programming/comments/a9qz9q/amoeba_finds_approximate_solutions_to_nphard/ecoblr3/ | 1548146126 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mojomonkeyfish | t2_71i1r | I'm going to need you to give me your social media credentials before you interview me. It's my policy. | null | 0 | 1544643534 | False | 0 | ebnf3na | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebneodt | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebnf3na/ | 1547524558 | 9 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | agonnaz | t2_wsa3w | How is phpstorm's Java support? | null | 0 | 1545937028 | False | 0 | ecobm21 | t3_aa05by | null | null | t1_eco4fpg | /r/programming/comments/aa05by/netbeans_100_released/ecobm21/ | 1548146129 | 35 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | JagSmize | t2_a1r0wbk | What a pleasant individual. I wonder if he mellowed with age or if he was always this way. Maybe I’ll search for a video of a younger him later. He’s definitely no Dijkstra. | null | 0 | 1544643538 | False | 0 | ebnf3un | t3_a5kk6b | null | null | t3_a5kk6b | /r/programming/comments/a5kk6b/donald_knuths_24th_annual_christmas_lecture/ebnf3un/ | 1547524561 | 16 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Pleb_nz | t2_i3a02 | Did you have to choose electron. I would have tried it otherwise | null | 0 | 1545937071 | False | 0 | ecobnzn | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t3_a9tm4z | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecobnzn/ | 1548146153 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ExpensiveStreet | t2_2rtg32kw | anyone wanna make some money i need help with a python assessment? all you need is python knowledge. message me at alexlaid3@gmail.com | null | 0 | 1544643657 | False | 0 | ebnf9nk | t3_9tqxd9 | null | null | t3_9tqxd9 | /r/programming/comments/9tqxd9/python_is_becoming_the_worlds_most_popular_coding/ebnf9nk/ | 1547524633 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | humoroushaxor | t2_extbe | The contracts/clients makes sense but then it shouldn't of been a monorepo in the first place. I don't really see the harm in employees being about to view a git repo though. | null | 1 | 1545937087 | False | 0 | ecobop9 | t3_a9yxp6 | null | null | t1_eco90sy | /r/programming/comments/a9yxp6/gitbatch_manage_all_of_your_git_repositories_in/ecobop9/ | 1548146162 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | zqvt | t2_18uf4vq | well it's not that simple, the article asks directly
>
Do Emacs and Vim users have some other characteristic that makes them more likely to succeed during interviews? Perhaps they tend to be more willing to invest time and effort customizing a complex editor in the short-term in order to get returns from a more powerful tool in the long-term?
Programming is a craft and what good craftsmen generally have a common is a pretty intimate relationship to their tools. So vim and emacs usage in this case is probably a signal for willingness to customize and learn about your workflow and environment.
And I think this also applies causally. Exposing yourself to your tools and getting to know how they work will probably make you a better developer. We use them every day for hours and hours after all. | null | 0 | 1544643740 | False | 0 | ebnfdsq | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebn604m | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebnfdsq/ | 1547524685 | 10 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Dw0 | t2_7e35y | Ahm. Lol? Lightweight VMs as a replacement of containers the sole purpose of which was to be lightweight VMs? | null | 0 | 1545937323 | False | 0 | ecobz9a | t3_aa16i5 | null | null | t3_aa16i5 | /r/programming/comments/aa16i5/the_future_of_kubernetes_is_virtual_machines/ecobz9a/ | 1548146293 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | villanovafan | t2_15bgwh | GTFO with this shit | null | 0 | 1544643741 | False | 0 | ebnfdte | t3_a5l9pv | null | null | t3_a5l9pv | /r/programming/comments/a5l9pv/if_statement_in_c/ebnfdte/ | 1547524685 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 4655434b594f55 | t2_ccj17b8 | Very good! The IDE base is the same, for java its called Intellij IDEA. This is also the base for Android Studio which uses java and kotlin. | null | 0 | 1545937396 | False | 0 | ecoc2iv | t3_aa05by | null | null | t1_ecobm21 | /r/programming/comments/aa05by/netbeans_100_released/ecoc2iv/ | 1548146335 | -28 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jeanlaf | t2_11542k | Agreed that the point is how you use the tool. Jira is really useful once you are in the last mile, in execution mode. The issue I see is that developers don't have a say in how the org uses Jira. Most often, the PM will create the tickets and by doing so, they influence the perception of how things should be done. And the eng team has to cope with it.
The big limitations I see with Jira is that they only have epics and tickets. Maybe if we had tickets with unlimited parent/child relationships, it would allow PMs to stay high level and let developers organize the projects the way they want with as many child tickets. I know that Apple's Radar is built this way typically. | null | 0 | 1544643748 | False | 0 | ebnfe5n | t3_a4n0p9 | null | null | t1_ebfyd9x | /r/programming/comments/a4n0p9/jira_is_an_antipattern/ebnfe5n/ | 1547524689 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | greenthumble | t2_8ebq0 | What. I built a douchnozzle filter and suddenly getting these blank replies from some douchenozzle. Bet he has nothing interesting to say. Guess what? My contract is furloughed for two weeks! I can keep this up forever! Aren't you building something? Shouldn't you be focused on that, idiot douche? | null | 0 | 1545937399 | False | 0 | ecoc2mt | t3_a9qz9q | null | null | t1_ecoblr3 | /r/programming/comments/a9qz9q/amoeba_finds_approximate_solutions_to_nphard/ecoc2mt/ | 1548146336 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | yogthos | t2_73rg | You should read up on [specification based testing](https://www.st.cs.uni-saarland.de/edu/testingdebugging10/slides/24_SpecificationBasedTesting.pdf) and [generative testing](https://www.jeffhui.net/2015/07-generative-testing.html). You identify the defined behaviors in your application, and you test those end to end. What you really care about is that the application is doing what was intended. | null | 0 | 1544643776 | False | 0 | ebnffff | t3_a5iior | null | null | t1_ebmv3q2 | /r/programming/comments/a5iior/tests_wont_make_your_software_correct/ebnffff/ | 1547524705 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HellfireOwner | t2_2juz5fhu | I don't block out of principle. And, could give a fuck if you block me. | null | 0 | 1545937642 | False | 0 | ecocdaf | t3_a9qz9q | null | null | t1_ecoc2mt | /r/programming/comments/a9qz9q/amoeba_finds_approximate_solutions_to_nphard/ecocdaf/ | 1548146495 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Scellow | t2_9phqw | kotlin has big issues, auto-boxing everywhere and lack of value type, it'd be my main language if they they'd fix that JVM bullshit | null | 0 | 1544643782 | False | 0 | ebnffqv | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebmckk2 | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebnffqv/ | 1547524709 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Lewistrick | t2_laox8 | I have far better experience with Google. | null | 0 | 1545937657 | False | 0 | ecocdyh | t3_a9z26i | null | null | t3_a9z26i | /r/programming/comments/a9z26i/comparison_of_the_top_speech_processing_apis/ecocdyh/ | 1548146504 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jeanlaf | t2_11542k | Quite a long article. If you want to read a summary, here is one:
[https://anaxi.com/blog/2018/12/11/lessons-learned-from-scaling-stripes-engineering-team/](https://anaxi.com/blog/2018/12/11/lessons-learned-from-scaling-stripes-engineering-team/) | null | 0 | 1544643806 | False | 0 | ebnfgvk | t3_a3hg78 | null | null | t3_a3hg78 | /r/programming/comments/a3hg78/stripe_atlas_guide_to_scaling_engineering/ebnfgvk/ | 1547524723 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | wellfriedbeans | t2_uh03y | A visualization of the incremental construction algorithm of the [Delauney Triangulation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delaunay_triangulation).
I used d3.js for the actual animations, and TypeScript to implement the quad-edge data-structure and the construction algorithm.
All comments are welcome!
If you're interested, github: [https://github.com/ameya98/GraphAlgorithmsVisualized](https://github.com/ameya98/GraphAlgorithmsVisualized) | null | 0 | 1545937894 | False | 0 | ecoco8g | t3_aa23nx | null | null | t3_aa23nx | /r/programming/comments/aa23nx/visualizing_the_delauney_triangulation/ecoco8g/ | 1548146631 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | TomRK1089 | t2_6f1b1 | I love how the proper solution is sarcastically dismissed:
\>Of course you could run your own internal Maven repository for your company and have every project rely on that exclusively, with only carefully reviewed and verified packages being imported there. *Most won't have time to be so careful about dependencies. \[emphasis mine\]*
I wasn't familiar with JitPack, so I went to their website...
\>The first time you request a project JitPack checks out the code, builds it and serves the build artifacts (jar, aar).
Play with fire, expect to get burned. There's a reason most projects rely on mirrors like Artifactory or Nexus -- you get all the "default" content from Maven Central, and you can 'vendor' other libraries by importing them into your private repo yourself.
(I also love how JCenter/BinTray poke at Maven Central for not being secure, due to the possibility of your signed artifacts not being uploaded by who you think they were...and yet, it's clear from this scenario they're not doing any \*better\* on that front. Not that we should give Central a pass, but I don't see how JCenter handled the package-squatting case any better here.) | null | 0 | 1544643829 | False | 0 | ebnfhz4 | t3_a5knml | null | null | t3_a5knml | /r/programming/comments/a5knml/a_confusing_dependency/ebnfhz4/ | 1547524736 | 31 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dougie-io | t2_l4cuh47 | > Hey! Vibrato looks really awesome. I have one feature request but that might be too radical of a depature: I'd love for the two sidebars to be collapsed into 1 - the notes shown beneath each notebook, inline in the hierarchical tree. Or would that be too far a different direction?
That sounds like something that could be done (relatively) easily with a 'Vibrato plugin™' **once** I create the functionality down the road (Which will allow for added functionality to be added through a scripting language). Not sure if you saw the GIF/video for it, but all three panels (the tree, the note list, and editor) can be collapsed and resized - there are even three different presets under View>>Layout.
The plugin would just tie into the sidebar's API to as well as listen for 'noteCreated', 'noteDeleted' and 'noteTrashed' events in order to insert the notes. Would help for performance as well to completely disable the note sidebar so you're not loading the same notes in two places.
Biggest challenge would be some sort of pagination or "Show more" option but won't be too bad if I make the sidebar's API a little more versatile. | null | 0 | 1545938012 | False | 0 | ecoctg3 | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t1_eco93sa | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecoctg3/ | 1548146694 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | AffectionateTotal7 | t2_2ku10f9f | Are you trying to say it's as popular now or that it took you 20years? Because if it's the former than I disagree. | null | 0 | 1544643850 | False | 0 | ebnfj09 | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebnf1tq | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebnfj09/ | 1547524749 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | JaviFesser | t2_gj23p | What about [Wit.ai](https://wit.ai/)? | null | 0 | 1545938162 | False | 0 | ecoczyz | t3_a9z26i | null | null | t3_a9z26i | /r/programming/comments/a9z26i/comparison_of_the_top_speech_processing_apis/ecoczyz/ | 1548146775 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jeanlaf | t2_11542k | I think this part is totally true:
"**once you have one remote employee, you need to think of everyone as being a remote employee**." | null | 0 | 1544643915 | False | 0 | ebnfmch | t3_a5lkde | null | null | t3_a5lkde | /r/programming/comments/a5lkde/building_a_distributed_engineering_team/ebnfmch/ | 1547524819 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | KyleG | t2_4qkqz | This. I wonder how hard it would be to disassemble an Echo to use their good mics with this. Wasn't the real innovation of the Echo originally at its mics' ability to isolate voice vs ambient noise? | null | 0 | 1545938279 | False | 0 | ecod50h | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_eclbsyc | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/ecod50h/ | 1548146837 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | myringotomy | t2_9f1cg | Yup and it's going to make this subreddit really really angry. | null | 0 | 1544644228 | False | 0 | ebng1u7 | t3_a5ikq1 | null | null | t1_ebn4swh | /r/programming/comments/a5ikq1/fuchsia_sdk_is_now_included_into_android_open/ebng1u7/ | 1547525011 | 11 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | light24bulbs | t2_3h0wl | For limiting read, no, but for push access, yes. GitHub added it fairly recently with CODEOWNERS, it's very simple. https://blog.github.com/2017-07-06-introducing-code-owners/
If that's underpowered for you LGTM can accomplish similar things, if you plug it into Lerna.
Between Lerna and CODEOWNERS you're pretty much set, at least to around 100 devs.
I can imagine other situations but there's really no reason to restrict read access in this case. This was a large web app that they broke apart into dozens of containers and repos because "microservices". My last day was last week. I really wouldn't recommend working at an East Coast enterprise. Those of you making it work, good for you, but I'm out.
I sent this to my old co-workers. | null | 0 | 1545938350 | 1545938745 | 0 | ecod83g | t3_a9yxp6 | null | null | t1_eco90sy | /r/programming/comments/a9yxp6/gitbatch_manage_all_of_your_git_repositories_in/ecod83g/ | 1548146875 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Sznurek066 | t2_tsud1 | C# is best language?
If we are talking about modern languages I would say rust or swift.
If you really care about speed c is still the best.
If you want to work fast python is great.
Don’t get me wrong I like c# but unless you are developing specifically for windows using windows forms I don’t think it’s the best language nearly for anything else. | null | 0 | 1544644278 | False | 0 | ebng4at | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebndvoz | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebng4at/ | 1547525041 | -8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | I really like this! My friends and I researched and implemented a Delaunay Triangulator for generating Voronoi Diagrams for our Algorithms class project. This is a very nice visualization. It might be interesting to add some of the intermediate steps, like the circumcircles and finding the bad triangles. | null | 0 | 1545938360 | False | 0 | ecod8gm | t3_aa23nx | null | null | t3_aa23nx | /r/programming/comments/aa23nx/visualizing_the_delauney_triangulation/ecod8gm/ | 1548146880 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | To play devils advocate... learning a language is more then just learning the syntax; which is something you can do in one afternoon. Learning a language involves learning the APIs/libraries of that language and the various quirks of the language. | null | 0 | 1544644391 | False | 0 | ebng9qq | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebn8u0b | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebng9qq/ | 1547525109 | 15 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | exorxor | t2_h57gcb9 | Why would you want to expose yourself to the > 1000 open bugs in Kubernetes?
It's so bad, I wouldn't even dare to show it for a school project. | null | 1 | 1545938497 | False | 0 | ecodef7 | t3_aa16i5 | null | null | t3_aa16i5 | /r/programming/comments/aa16i5/the_future_of_kubernetes_is_virtual_machines/ecodef7/ | 1548146954 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bobappleyard | t2_35nzn | This doesn't sound like a good idea to me | null | 0 | 1544644426 | False | 0 | ebngbgm | t3_a5ljzj | null | null | t3_a5ljzj | /r/programming/comments/a5ljzj/do_any_ides_support_inline_display_of_output/ebngbgm/ | 1547525129 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | chucker23n | t2_39t9i | >The contracts/clients makes sense but then it shouldn't of been a monorepo in the first place.
I didn't even mean contracts as in contracting work. I meant contract documents, period. You wouldn't put those on a file server that everyone has read access to. You would be vigilant about which department (and which employees within) does and doesn't get to view thos records.
But yeah, for client work, it's perhaps more obvious why this is a complete non-starter in many environments.
>I don't really see the harm in employees being about to view a git repo though.
Really, though? This seems like business espionage 101 to me.
Having access to _all_ code in a corporation could cause so much entirely unnecessary problems.
You could easily (and perhaps unwittingly) become privy to _tons_ of information.
Hints about unannounced future products.
Or acquisitions.
Or credentials, even. (Yes, yes, I know, those don't belong in a repo. But it'd be naïve to think it doesn't happen all the time.)
You could (accidentally or otherwise) in turn leak some of that information yourself.
You could quit and take it to a competitor.
All without having done _any_ cracking at all — it _automatically_ becomes shared across everyone cloning the repo. | null | 0 | 1545938519 | False | 0 | ecodffp | t3_a9yxp6 | null | null | t1_ecobop9 | /r/programming/comments/a9yxp6/gitbatch_manage_all_of_your_git_repositories_in/ecodffp/ | 1548146966 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | joesii | t2_iog5a | > What if you code a backdoor as per the legislation
As far as I understood the legislation specifically says that there should not be any backdoors (the article talks about this if you jump to "backdoor"), so that sort of situation doesn't seem like it would happen.
That said, if it was following a government mandate and they got fired for it, that would be a clear-cut case of wrongful termination. It would be like firing an employee for them refusing to steal from someone. | null | 0 | 1544644471 | 1544644815 | 0 | ebngdpj | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_eblhsrt | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebngdpj/ | 1547525157 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | greynoises | t2_6h5fi | Isn't `git pull` basically just a fetch followed by a merge? What's the advantage of doing them separately? | null | 0 | 1545938687 | False | 0 | ecodmq1 | t3_a9yxp6 | null | null | t1_ecobbjh | /r/programming/comments/a9yxp6/gitbatch_manage_all_of_your_git_repositories_in/ecodmq1/ | 1548147086 | 39 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | myringotomy | t2_9f1cg | Two outdated technologies. | null | 0 | 1544644505 | False | 0 | ebngfcc | t3_a5kgl8 | null | null | t3_a5kgl8 | /r/programming/comments/a5kgl8/boosting_the_development_environment_with_vagrant/ebngfcc/ | 1547525177 | -4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | BananaOverlord1 | t2_2filafcm | In java? | null | 0 | 1545938696 | False | 0 | ecodn2z | t3_a9wewn | null | null | t3_a9wewn | /r/programming/comments/a9wewn/t_sin_t_christmas_tree/ecodn2z/ | 1548147091 | -8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Holy_City | t2_bj3zm | >If code "sometimes" works as expected that means sometimes it doesn't, and it needs to be fixed.
Not every piece of software is deterministic. That's why you specify performance to a degree of certainty, like in any other field of engineering. But that's a separate issue, testing is only a part of that.
I'd argue that any test that isn't repeatable is a useless test. You can validate whether a failure or success is valid if you can't do it again. That'd be like basing science on experiments that are only performed once.
When you need random input for your data you really want "random" input, generate sufficiently random data once and reuse it. | null | 0 | 1544644631 | False | 0 | ebngljs | t3_a5iior | null | null | t1_ebnaxsh | /r/programming/comments/a5iior/tests_wont_make_your_software_correct/ebngljs/ | 1547525254 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | chucker23n | t2_39t9i | That sounds like it only works at a branch level. | null | 0 | 1545938709 | False | 0 | ecodnnx | t3_a9yxp6 | null | null | t1_ecod83g | /r/programming/comments/a9yxp6/gitbatch_manage_all_of_your_git_repositories_in/ecodnnx/ | 1548147097 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | chem4 | t2_1o7qokw8 | The only thing I know of that's *kinda* like what you're looking for is [quokka](https://quokkajs.com/). However, it's for JS development with VSCode. Lemme know if you find an equivalent for C#! | null | 0 | 1544644666 | False | 0 | ebngn7g | t3_a5ljzj | null | null | t3_a5ljzj | /r/programming/comments/a5ljzj/do_any_ides_support_inline_display_of_output/ebngn7g/ | 1547525274 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | KyleG | t2_4qkqz | or just alias those punctuations to thinks like "whee" and "fuck yeah" "hey bash tail fuck yeah whee badass unnnnngh rekt nuthin but a peanut!" | null | 0 | 1545938763 | False | 0 | ecodpy4 | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_ecld4ak | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/ecodpy4/ | 1548147126 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | myringotomy | t2_9f1cg | Emacs. | null | 0 | 1544644863 | False | 0 | ebngwo3 | t3_a5ljzj | null | null | t3_a5ljzj | /r/programming/comments/a5ljzj/do_any_ides_support_inline_display_of_output/ebngwo3/ | 1547525420 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Roppeldidu | t2_5kx8p | So not phpstorm then. | null | 0 | 1545938782 | False | 0 | ecodqrk | t3_aa05by | null | null | t1_ecoc2iv | /r/programming/comments/aa05by/netbeans_100_released/ecodqrk/ | 1548147135 | 28 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | joesii | t2_iog5a | My very confident "guess" is no, definitely not, not **_unless_** they are working for an _Australian company_. (which is _possible_, but typically not the case, and probably _never_ the case once companies learn about this sort of thing and stop using any Australian company for help with anything, just like how countries are weary about using Chinese businesses like Huawei for help)
The legislation seems to talk about requests to companies, not specific individuals. | null | 0 | 1544644912 | 1544645590 | 0 | ebngz10 | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_ebkk5s3 | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebngz10/ | 1547525448 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | KyleG | t2_4qkqz | Exactly. I mean, the script itself is an abstracted form of the underlying commands. | null | 0 | 1545938816 | False | 0 | ecods66 | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_eclrw4i | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/ecods66/ | 1548147153 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1544644966 | False | 0 | ebnh1l3 | t3_a5kk6b | null | null | t1_ebnf3un | /r/programming/comments/a5kk6b/donald_knuths_24th_annual_christmas_lecture/ebnh1l3/ | 1547525481 | -2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | KyleG | t2_4qkqz | >So many things take up so many more resources than they need.
Well I mean replacing a keyboard with a fully fledged AI voice recognition engine with training data isn't exactly a great example of resource minimization XD | null | 0 | 1545938875 | False | 0 | ecoduo2 | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_ecls2sc | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/ecoduo2/ | 1548147184 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | saichampa | t2_6n80r | I certainly wasn't intending to talk shit on them. Thanks for the link, I was curious about them. | null | 0 | 1544644986 | False | 0 | ebnh2kn | t3_a5c8hi | null | null | t1_ebn5ll5 | /r/programming/comments/a5c8hi/ikos_21_an_open_source_static_analyzer_for_c_and/ebnh2kn/ | 1547525492 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bdtddt | t2_x8et0 | Markdown utilises a very small subset of modern HTML, you may not wish to write your own renderer for this project, but it is totally achievable and desirable. | null | 0 | 1545938883 | False | 0 | ecodv1s | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t1_eco38jr | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecodv1s/ | 1548147188 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jerf | t2_9duv | For a pure function, by definition, the results of other executing code can not effect it.
Typically we smudge the definition a bit to ignore memory allocation and the possibility of being forever starved of CPU by the OS and a handful of other corner cases.
> With a similar argument, side effects that only affect code within a component won't cause new trouble if other components are added.
You seem to be implying this is also "bullshit", but it seems a reasonable statement to me. I use that sort of logic all the time. | null | 0 | 1544644988 | False | 0 | ebnh2np | t3_a5iior | null | null | t1_ebnec8u | /r/programming/comments/a5iior/tests_wont_make_your_software_correct/ebnh2np/ | 1547525493 | 13 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | thepeanutguy | t2_8lubb | In what way? | null | 0 | 1545938884 | False | 0 | ecodv2b | t3_aa13tt | null | null | t1_eco8tay | /r/programming/comments/aa13tt/dart_vs_swift_a_comparison/ecodv2b/ | 1548147188 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | exorxor | t2_h57gcb9 | Correctness has a definition and it's not this.
Please remove this crap from the Internet. | null | 0 | 1544645131 | False | 0 | ebnh9f2 | t3_a5iior | null | null | t3_a5iior | /r/programming/comments/a5iior/tests_wont_make_your_software_correct/ebnh9f2/ | 1547525578 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jyper | t2_44f90 | Does anyone use pickle?
I usually just serialize to json if the types are simple and find some library like the yaml one to serialize to json/yaml/xml in more complex cases | null | 0 | 1545938985 | False | 0 | ecodzgh | t3_a9o4zd | null | null | t1_eclbifg | /r/programming/comments/a9o4zd/comprehensive_python_cheatsheet/ecodzgh/ | 1548147243 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | paulmclaughlin | t2_3cvsh | 2019 will be the year of the Linux desktop. | null | 0 | 1544645168 | False | 0 | ebnhb6z | t3_a5hkyo | null | null | t1_ebn3kjg | /r/programming/comments/a5hkyo/investigating_an_early2010s_gaming_drm_system_or/ebnhb6z/ | 1547525600 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | nirataro | t2_m09pc | Let's start with object rest and spread
https://blog.mariusschulz.com/2016/12/23/typescript-2-1-object-rest-and-spread
| null | 0 | 1545939040 | False | 0 | ecoe1vp | t3_aa13tt | null | null | t1_ecoadk1 | /r/programming/comments/aa13tt/dart_vs_swift_a_comparison/ecoe1vp/ | 1548147272 | -1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | AbstractProxyFactory | t2_1776ny | This is an effect of interop. Kotlin doesn't have checked exceptions. | null | 0 | 1544645186 | False | 0 | ebnhc2e | t3_a5969k | null | null | t1_ebmvezq | /r/programming/comments/a5969k/java_12_likely_will_not_have_raw_string_literals/ebnhc2e/ | 1547525610 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | light24bulbs | t2_3h0wl | I feel like accuracy was the most important assessment here and they barely touched on it.
if they had like a thousand samples and they uploaded it to each of them and checked for accuracy, that would be cool. | null | 0 | 1545939087 | False | 0 | ecoe3uv | t3_a9z26i | null | null | t1_eco33ti | /r/programming/comments/a9z26i/comparison_of_the_top_speech_processing_apis/ecoe3uv/ | 1548147297 | 41 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Aaronvan | t2_8db0v | Curious that GNU released so many useful and important tools, but they just couldn't develop a kernel. | null | 0 | 1544645210 | False | 0 | ebnhda6 | t3_a5gxm6 | null | null | t1_ebmkqm8 | /r/programming/comments/a5gxm6/freebsd_12_released/ebnhda6/ | 1547525625 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | aoeudhtns | t2_fiz4e | Agree, you can already have something kinda like this with OpenStack. You can still use containers for compute, and there's even a component to plug in Kubernetes, Mesos, etc. if, yo dawg, you're into that. | null | 0 | 1545939170 | False | 0 | ecoe7h3 | t3_aa16i5 | null | null | t1_ecobz9a | /r/programming/comments/aa16i5/the_future_of_kubernetes_is_virtual_machines/ecoe7h3/ | 1548147341 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | YouGotAte | t2_epp9u | Except the claim was about being productive in that language in a single day, not about learning the language from top to bottom. Yeah that takes time but it's not required for writing code. | null | 0 | 1544645258 | False | 0 | ebnhfjp | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebng9qq | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebnhfjp/ | 1547525654 | 10 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | niceper | t2_176b3tim | I suspect Kotlin support in netbeans will always be subpar compared to intellij. Makes sense as Jetbrains made Kotlin, they would want every one to use their IDE, Intellij. There is a kotlin plug in for nb which seems to be abandoned by jetbrains now.
| null | 0 | 1545939203 | False | 0 | ecoe8v8 | t3_aa05by | null | null | t1_ecnzgid | /r/programming/comments/aa05by/netbeans_100_released/ecoe8v8/ | 1548147359 | 36 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | joesii | t2_iog5a | I don't believe your assertions; or at least the specific combination of them such that the outcome is "yes it does".
As far as I know the legislation would apply to Australian _companies_. Now if an Australian company was located outside of Australia, it would apply, likely even for non-Australians (they wouldn't be arrested, but they'd lose their job), including Australian companies doing work for non-Australian companies.
However, when it comes to an Australian _individual_ working for a non-Australian company, I don't buy it one bit that it would apply to them. I won't believe it until I specifically see specific information/news stating otherwise. It isn't an "all Australians must rat out information to the government when asked" legislation, it's a "all Australian _businesses_...." one. | null | 0 | 1544645284 | False | 0 | ebnhgsg | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_ebmec7e | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebnhgsg/ | 1547525669 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | light24bulbs | t2_3h0wl | I mean I don't think that's even a feature of git, let alone GitHub. It's no good for keeping people from seeing code.
A much more common problem is preventing other people from messing up your code and designating who should review what parts of a large codebase. | null | 0 | 1545939260 | False | 0 | ecoebdi | t3_a9yxp6 | null | null | t1_ecodnnx | /r/programming/comments/a9yxp6/gitbatch_manage_all_of_your_git_repositories_in/ecoebdi/ | 1548147389 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | PferdOne | t2_ma5yc | Have you tried gamecopyworld? | null | 0 | 1544645337 | False | 0 | ebnhjcl | t3_a5hkyo | null | null | t1_ebmxrbx | /r/programming/comments/a5hkyo/investigating_an_early2010s_gaming_drm_system_or/ebnhjcl/ | 1547525701 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Darkglow666 | t2_aaxo5 | You could start with that, but only if you didn't understand David's comment at all. That's a nice little feature of TypeScript, but it has nothing to do with comparing TS's and Dart's type systems. | null | 0 | 1545939265 | False | 0 | ecoebkd | t3_aa13tt | null | null | t1_ecoe1vp | /r/programming/comments/aa13tt/dart_vs_swift_a_comparison/ecoebkd/ | 1548147392 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Matthew94 | t2_6jzsd | why? | null | 0 | 1544645483 | False | 0 | ebnhq9d | t3_a5hkyo | null | null | t1_ebn651x | /r/programming/comments/a5hkyo/investigating_an_early2010s_gaming_drm_system_or/ebnhq9d/ | 1547525785 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | redditthinks | t2_43jni | So many note-taking apps. Is this not a solved problem at this point? | null | 0 | 1545939326 | False | 0 | ecoee77 | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t3_a9tm4z | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecoee77/ | 1548147424 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Ameisen | t2_5qad2 | It's [*actually*](https://i.imgur.com/F0wjeof.mp4) the Unicode Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics block. | null | 0 | 1544645544 | False | 0 | ebnht76 | t3_a5i57x | null | null | t1_ebneif9 | /r/programming/comments/a5i57x/the_rise_of_microsoft_visual_studio_code/ebnht76/ | 1547525821 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | light24bulbs | t2_3h0wl | Hahahaha you couldn't be more right, I quit last week. | null | 0 | 1545939334 | False | 0 | ecoeejg | t3_a9yxp6 | null | null | t1_eco76no | /r/programming/comments/a9yxp6/gitbatch_manage_all_of_your_git_repositories_in/ecoeejg/ | 1548147428 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dharmatech | t2_1s3m | Do you know of an Emacs mode which supports this? | null | 0 | 1544645568 | False | 0 | ebnhudf | t3_a5ljzj | null | null | t1_ebngwo3 | /r/programming/comments/a5ljzj/do_any_ides_support_inline_display_of_output/ebnhudf/ | 1547525837 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | schulaceTR | t2_gaaka | No. Click the link | null | 0 | 1545939409 | False | 0 | ecoehul | t3_a9wewn | null | null | t1_ecodn2z | /r/programming/comments/a9wewn/t_sin_t_christmas_tree/ecoehul/ | 1548147469 | 9 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dharmatech | t2_1s3m | Quokka does look pretty cool! | null | 0 | 1544645590 | False | 0 | ebnhvgc | t3_a5ljzj | null | null | t1_ebngn7g | /r/programming/comments/a5ljzj/do_any_ides_support_inline_display_of_output/ebnhvgc/ | 1547525850 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | godsdead | t2_36bt4 | How is this better than Google keep? | null | 0 | 1545939476 | False | 0 | ecoektp | t3_a9tm4z | null | null | t3_a9tm4z | /r/programming/comments/a9tm4z/notable_the_markdownbased_notetaking_app_that/ecoektp/ | 1548147506 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Ameisen | t2_5qad2 | Most people *don't* know what strict aliasing is. However, in MSVC it's disable by default (in fact, you cannot enable it), and many projects that people work on probably already have it disabled by default (such as the Linux kernel).
Otherwise, if they don't know what strict aliasing is, well, let's just say their code is probably not well-defined. | null | 0 | 1544645666 | False | 0 | ebnhzae | t3_a4ufwz | null | null | t1_ebn4wvq | /r/programming/comments/a4ufwz/typebased_alias_analysis/ebnhzae/ | 1547525897 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | wellfriedbeans | t2_uh03y | Nice, I would like to see that too! I will get to animating the intermediate steps soon, it's just a matter of figuring out the right animations from d3 and timing them correctly. | null | 0 | 1545939636 | False | 0 | ecoersj | t3_aa23nx | null | null | t1_ecod8gm | /r/programming/comments/aa23nx/visualizing_the_delauney_triangulation/ecoersj/ | 1548147623 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | joesii | t2_iog5a | I disagree. I'd say it would only ever apply if they were in an Australian business (regardless of the business' location), completely unrelated to the citizenship of the person (even non-Australians in the Australian businesses would be forced to comply, only difference is if they don't, they'd just lose their job rather than being criminally charged) | null | 0 | 1544645737 | False | 0 | ebni2sr | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_eblwog9 | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebni2sr/ | 1547525940 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | kodestar | t2_5bcsj | why do you think the results were surprising? | null | 0 | 1545939643 | False | 0 | ecoes2m | t3_aa2btj | null | null | t3_aa2btj | /r/programming/comments/aa2btj/comparison_cpu_and_mem_usage_while_reading_the/ecoes2m/ | 1548147627 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | worldwide__master | t2_166uft4g | In 1977 NASA sent into space the famous Voyager I and II spaceprobes. A message to any future alien species that could find the probes was attached to the probes, as a golden phonographic disk containing samples of sounds of planet Earth, including greetings, music and a collection of images depicting many aspects of the Earth existence. | null | 0 | 1544645861 | False | 0 | ebni8xp | t3_a5lvcb | null | null | t3_a5lvcb | /r/programming/comments/a5lvcb/nasa_voyagers_golden_disk_image_browser/ebni8xp/ | 1547526045 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | purtip31 | t2_37l94 | Jira. Phabricator. YouTrack. There are many, many more, but those are the ones I’ve worked with personally that have most of the features in the post out of the box. I don’t think any of them has everything, but there are always plugins. | null | 0 | 1545939704 | False | 0 | ecoeusk | t3_a9zeej | null | null | t3_a9zeej | /r/programming/comments/a9zeej/things_id_like_in_my_code_management_tool/ecoeusk/ | 1548147660 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | joesii | t2_iog5a | I know what you mean, but from what I gathered (and from what some other people have said days ago) it seems to be implying that you'd have to use something like client-server encryption, rather than end-to-end, such that the information will be encrypted along all transport paths, but the servers themselves will still log the unencrypted data before sending it off encrypted again.
I wouldn't call that a vulnerability.
It is annoyingly unclear as to the legislation's stance on products which offer end-to-end encryption, but it seems as though companies which develop such things may be breaking the law (after receiving notices that they're doing such, and giving them time to fix it).
My guess is non-profit/rogue developing groups won't be chased down tough (nor individuals); so they'd be safe, they just won't be able to sell their software to any Australian business, nor hold any major/lead stake in any business/software that they do end up selling to some other country's company. | null | 0 | 1544646199 | False | 0 | ebnipt8 | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_ebm8h6q | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebnipt8/ | 1547526254 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 4655434b594f55 | t2_ccj17b8 | im sure you are not that stupid to not understand what im saying. How else could you be a programmer? | null | 0 | 1545939715 | False | 0 | ecoev8q | t3_aa05by | null | null | t1_ecodqrk | /r/programming/comments/aa05by/netbeans_100_released/ecoev8q/ | 1548147666 | -38 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | asraniel | t2_6c1xf | Or make the change so obvious that the employer understands clearly whats going on? Is that an option? Your not telling anyone, your just incompetent | null | 0 | 1544646236 | False | 0 | ebnirml | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_eblzppr | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebnirml/ | 1547526277 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HellfireOwner | t2_2juz5fhu | Pickle is super convenient and it doesn't need to be in key:value form...which is how json works, if I am not mistaken. | null | 0 | 1545939839 | False | 0 | ecof0pl | t3_a9o4zd | null | null | t1_ecodzgh | /r/programming/comments/a9o4zd/comprehensive_python_cheatsheet/ecof0pl/ | 1548147734 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | biggestidiotever2 | t2_2k15llz0 | No, I haven't heard if it. | null | 0 | 1544646241 | False | 0 | ebnirwg | t3_a5hkyo | null | null | t1_ebnhjcl | /r/programming/comments/a5hkyo/investigating_an_early2010s_gaming_drm_system_or/ebnirwg/ | 1547526280 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | redditthinks | t2_43jni | For folks who like this kind of thing, check out [dwitter](https://www.dwitter.net/). | null | 0 | 1545939855 | False | 0 | ecof1fg | t3_a9wewn | null | null | t3_a9wewn | /r/programming/comments/a9wewn/t_sin_t_christmas_tree/ecof1fg/ | 1548147742 | 18 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | joesii | t2_iog5a | Look at the article where it mentions "backdoor". The legislation specifically requires _not_ implementing holes/weaknesses such as backdoors. That may sound confusing/conflicting (and it is, at least to a degree), but it seems as though they are referring to requiring use of client-server encryption and banning end-to-end encryption. That in itself is not really an obvious/direct vulnerability (although I'm aware that one could probably state that it could fall under such a classification if one had very absolute/broad definitions of the term) | null | 0 | 1544646267 | False | 0 | ebnit6n | t3_a57th7 | null | null | t1_ebm7st5 | /r/programming/comments/a57th7/australias_new_encryption_laws_ensure_companies/ebnit6n/ | 1547526296 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1545939872 | False | 0 | ecof260 | t3_a9npfu | null | null | t1_ecl7mzo | /r/programming/comments/a9npfu/offline_voice_ai_within_512_kb_of_ram_youtube/ecof260/ | 1548147752 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | shevegen | t2_atqp | Google really tries to aim for the world.
Mark my words - Fuchsia will fail. | null | 0 | 1544646296 | False | 0 | ebniulo | t3_a5ikq1 | null | null | t3_a5ikq1 | /r/programming/comments/a5ikq1/fuchsia_sdk_is_now_included_into_android_open/ebniulo/ | 1547526313 | -20 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | crabbone | t2_e3qdk15 | Nah, it wasn't really their sole purpose, and it actually shows. Their original aim was process isolation, which accidentally got a file-system and a popular repository of file-system snapshots.
There are a lot of other problems with containers, beside tenancy. Here are few more:
1. You cannot allocate ports at will, after creating a container. But then you need this for certain very necessary network protocols like FTP or iSCSI. While it's possible to give up on FTP, if you give up on iSCSI you lose a whole class of applications: SANs.
2. But then you cannot really run NAS in container because both client and server (eg. NFS) are provided by the kernel, which sits on the host, so, your guest cannot provide such a service...
3. If you need something like `udev` etc. you, again, run into situation that you either have to "drill holes" into the host, or your guest cannot do it.
So, k8s and friends end up being platforms, which inadvertently lock you into the providers of the platform, because you will have to use whatever settings of the kernel running your containers, and will have no way of changing those. | null | 0 | 1545939936 | False | 0 | ecof507 | t3_aa16i5 | null | null | t1_ecobz9a | /r/programming/comments/aa16i5/the_future_of_kubernetes_is_virtual_machines/ecof507/ | 1548147786 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | shevegen | t2_atqp | Failure is coming indeed. | null | 0 | 1544646306 | False | 0 | ebniv2p | t3_a5ikq1 | null | null | t1_ebn4swh | /r/programming/comments/a5ikq1/fuchsia_sdk_is_now_included_into_android_open/ebniv2p/ | 1547526319 | -12 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | icholy | t2_ak6yc | Yeah ... he's definitely the stupid one /s | null | 0 | 1545939957 | False | 0 | ecof5wr | t3_aa05by | null | null | t1_ecoev8q | /r/programming/comments/aa05by/netbeans_100_released/ecof5wr/ | 1548147797 | 34 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | shevegen | t2_atqp | 1.0 signifies awesomeness?
To me it is just a somewhat random number. Doesn't mean a thing really. | null | 0 | 1544646329 | False | 0 | ebniw9g | t3_a5ikq1 | null | null | t1_ebna0de | /r/programming/comments/a5ikq1/fuchsia_sdk_is_now_included_into_android_open/ebniw9g/ | 1547526334 | -33 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1545940042 | False | 0 | ecof9nq | t3_a9elh1 | null | null | t1_ecj9hcv | /r/programming/comments/a9elh1/the_gift_of_giving_up/ecof9nq/ | 1548147844 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | shevegen | t2_atqp | Rightfully so.
Google always thinks it knows better than the rest of the world what to do. | null | 0 | 1544646352 | False | 0 | ebnixh7 | t3_a5ikq1 | null | null | t1_ebng1u7 | /r/programming/comments/a5ikq1/fuchsia_sdk_is_now_included_into_android_open/ebnixh7/ | 1547526350 | -13 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ItzWarty | t2_56t41 | I visualized Fortune's Algorithm here: https://imgur.com/pevvXD3
Code's real simple: https://github.com/miyu/voronoi/blob/master/Voronoi/Program.cs -- the most time consuming part is rendering the algorithm's internal state. Without that, you could probably express this in ~200LOC. | null | 0 | 1545940127 | False | 0 | ecofdd3 | t3_aa23nx | null | null | t1_ecod8gm | /r/programming/comments/aa23nx/visualizing_the_delauney_triangulation/ecofdd3/ | 1548147890 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
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