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False | vattenpuss | t2_brzia | And it still works like a charm on a virtualized linux machine. | null | 0 | 1546126682 | False | 0 | ecu2ne8 | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t1_ectqh0b | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecu2ne8/ | 1548243152 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | neo_dev15 | t2_2gvqpwyy | Actually no.
Thats why refactoring exists. There is no "good code"... Because scope changes and your code is bad.
If you work alone and make a ping pong game you can write the most miserable code and the game will work. Well its done.
Good code == good specs of a project... Which most indie devs dont have. Mostly you try different stuff and see which sticks. | null | 0 | 1546126740 | False | 0 | ecu2pw8 | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecu1ea0 | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu2pw8/ | 1548243183 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | LeeHide | t2_tqbvo | Holy shit is this infuriating to read. You clearly have never seen how beautiful and efficient writing good code is. I'm out. | null | 0 | 1546126800 | False | 0 | ecu2sg7 | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecu2pw8 | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu2sg7/ | 1548243215 | -5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HellfireOwner | t2_2juz5fhu | The war is definitely behind the scenes...likely into the trillions of dollars being spent on this right now...the race to AI and who will control the future economy...
And, people are not smarter than I think. They are simply more malevolent than I'd care to imagine. | null | 1 | 1546126809 | False | 0 | ecu2svd | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecu2euw | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecu2svd/ | 1548243220 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Ahhhhrg | t2_5l3in | [I did one of those in assembler](https://youtu.be/eQkB6SipJkU), couldn’t figure out how to get random numbers though so I just pointed to the code sector, thinking it would be random enough. Not quite, but better than nothing I suppose... | null | 0 | 1546126900 | False | 0 | ecu2x4a | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecsm89h | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu2x4a/ | 1548243273 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1546126964 | False | 0 | ecu2zzn | t3_9hcdc8 | null | null | t3_9hcdc8 | /r/programming/comments/9hcdc8/adding_mercurial_support_to_gitlab/ecu2zzn/ | 1548243308 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | vattenpuss | t2_brzia | Regular users have hiccups with Windows as well, they call their kids or ask coworkers to help them fix things all the time.
I gave my grandmother a linux laptop team years ago and she was fine. The only iffy part was the wi-fi mysteriously losing connection but I’m pretty sure that part has improved in linux. (Meanwhile the most common issue we have with Windows here at home is mysteriously dropping wi-fi, no other computer or console is having those issues. | null | 0 | 1546127028 | False | 0 | ecu32uu | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t1_ectri77 | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecu32uu/ | 1548243344 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | chillermane | t2_1576xa | Avoiding fluff means being concise in what you're saying and also that you're actually providing substance. Your article should have a large overarching idea to it, each word and sentence should contribute to your reader's understanding the idea that you're trying to convey. Fluff can also mean elaborating too much on something simple. | null | 0 | 1546127059 | False | 0 | ecu346b | t3_9ypm05 | null | null | t1_ecshmwe | /r/programming/comments/9ypm05/want_to_know_the_easiest_way_to_save_time_use_make/ecu346b/ | 1548243360 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | BananaboySam | t2_w962w | Nice one! I wrote a tiny fire routine a long time ago too. It's 173 bytes. I don't think I entered the #coders comp at the time though. Here's a [screenshot](http://www.humbug.net/projects/js-fire.png) of mine running in dosbox. Source code is [here](http://www.humbug.net/projects/download/demos/js-fire7.zip) for anyone interested! | null | 0 | 1546127062 | False | 0 | ecu34bu | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ectq4l2 | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu34bu/ | 1548243362 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | neo_dev15 | t2_2gvqpwyy | Well you clearly never worked a day in your life.
Deadlines exists. Budgets exists.
You clearly never worked profesionally.
Otherwise you understand that for some software you get 4 hours to implement x.
| null | 0 | 1546127168 | False | 0 | ecu395o | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecu2sg7 | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu395o/ | 1548243421 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | cowardlydragon | t2_d0po | Imposter syndrome is made worse by every project being a random combination of various technologies, decisions, build scripts, deployments, network and server architectures.
The people that wrote the original system are often superpowered relative to other people because of their intimate knowledge of all those idiosyncracies. | null | 0 | 1546127187 | False | 0 | ecu39ym | t3_aaco1d | null | null | t1_ecr5rfc | /r/programming/comments/aaco1d/things_i_dont_know_as_of_2018/ecu39ym/ | 1548243431 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | birdbrainswagtrain | t2_car4b | > Because combinatorylogic actually knows things?
Of the few well-established narcissistic assholes on the sub I'm aware of, combinatorylogic is the one who actually seems to know what they're talking about.
And yes, I find their contributions far more valuable than most of the garbage blogspam that ends up here. | null | 0 | 1546127214 | False | 0 | ecu3b5h | t3_aaco1d | null | null | t1_ecravgu | /r/programming/comments/aaco1d/things_i_dont_know_as_of_2018/ecu3b5h/ | 1548243446 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | acwaters | t2_myfqa | Except that this is exactly the same marketing model as mobile apps' "I'm going to serve you ads that don't interfere with your experience but annoy you unless you pay me a tiny fee", which absolutely does work. Also, I have had the experience where I have grabbed something for free, really liked it, decided to throw a few bucks at the creator (via PWYW, donations, Patreon, or whatever), and then... just not. Because it was not convenient, or because I forgot. This sounds like a solution to exactly that problem. | null | 0 | 1546127256 | False | 0 | ecu3cyp | t3_aapk53 | null | null | t1_ectyh7i | /r/programming/comments/aapk53/linux_worlds_best_hope_for_the_mainstream/ecu3cyp/ | 1548243468 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | pleurplus | t2_radu8 | >They are simply more malevolent than I'd care to imagine.
That doesn't make much sense to generalize, since you are talking about two types of people, the ones that will be the victim and the ones that will profit from this "war".
So you could say the ones benefiting are malevolent, but they just have power, like kings, feudal lords now it's billionaires. They are not psychopaths, they are normal people with power.
The problem isn't the people. | null | 0 | 1546127277 | False | 0 | ecu3dz9 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecu2svd | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecu3dz9/ | 1548243481 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | nightcracker | t2_biibj | Where are the categories? | null | 0 | 1546127453 | False | 0 | ecu3lo7 | t3_aag673 | null | null | t3_aag673 | /r/programming/comments/aag673/ioccc_2019_begins_official_contest_rules/ecu3lo7/ | 1548243605 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | DonnyTheWalrus | t2_hbe1n | I think monads are one of those things that sound so complex that people overthink and blow right past the concept. IMO, monads are best thought of as a typed wrapper that can enclose results of computation and which have pleasing algebraic properties. Lists in the haskell sense are monads (e.g., 'Cons a | Empty'). You can pass lists around, map over lists, unwrap a 'Cons a' to get the 'a', create a 'Cons a' from an 'a'.
Formally, they are functors, which are "functions" that operate on categories. But you don't need to know the formal math to understand the non-formal definition and uses. Similarly, you don't need to know the lambda calculus to use Scheme.
Seriously, they're typed wrappers, where the wrappers can enclose units of computation. It gives you a box to use to pass around the inner value. These boxes can be chained with `bind`. That's kind of all. | null | 0 | 1546127462 | False | 0 | ecu3m44 | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ecscrye | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecu3m44/ | 1548243611 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | o11c | t2_fjay8 | Using language-level 2-dimensional arrays is usually horribly broken in one way or another:
* using "pointer to array of pointers" (like Java 2D arrays) causes an extra indirection and doesn't keep the memory contiguous.
* using "fixed-size array of fixed-size arrays" does work, assuming a fixed-size is suitable, although this will disappear at the assembly layer. But you do have to think carefully about whether your language is using C-order or Fortran-order, to avoid horribly cache behavior. Also, this can be hard to pass to a function.
* using "VLA of VLA" is poorly supported, and usually only works for local variables.
Emulating a 2D array by doing math for the indices of a 1D array avoids all problems, and is so common that basically everybody can read the code easily (including whether it's C-order or Fortran-order). | null | 0 | 1546127596 | False | 0 | ecu3s1c | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ectboqu | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu3s1c/ | 1548243684 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | allenasm | t2_fouwt | I’ve seen this in the tech world so much and it’s heart breaking. Frankly I would rather hire someone with 20+ years of experience programming or in tech because they have all of that knowledge to fall back on. But I’m in the vast minority on that. | null | 0 | 1546127656 | False | 0 | ecu3uo8 | t3_aandti | null | null | t3_aandti | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecu3uo8/ | 1548243716 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | errorseven | t2_456kh | You guys need to Unionize. | null | 0 | 1546127663 | False | 0 | ecu3v0l | t3_aandti | null | null | t3_aandti | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecu3v0l/ | 1548243720 | 18 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dtechnology | t2_7gar4 | I don't agree with those critiques. Overloading `flatMap` and `map` is perfectly fine as is the second argument because of JavaScript's loose typing. You could think of the ~6 different signatures as helper methods which would have another name in e.g. Haskell, in JS they're just overloaded. The important "real" one `F a -> (a -> F b) -> F b` is there.
And while the spec does not define a `return`, all implementating libraries do, giving them the 2 functions which make a monad (without the laws). | null | 0 | 1546127694 | False | 0 | ecu3wfd | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ecswocv | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecu3wfd/ | 1548243738 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | foxh8er | t2_60e80 | Yeah, and all of that is irrelevant if the candidate doesn't finish the question. That's only relevant if you finish. I've never heard of someone passing if they didn't get a perfect solution (and if it does happen, it's very rare). | null | 0 | 1546127732 | False | 0 | ecu3y6w | t3_aaco1d | null | null | t1_ecu0vpz | /r/programming/comments/aaco1d/things_i_dont_know_as_of_2018/ecu3y6w/ | 1548243760 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HellfireOwner | t2_2juz5fhu | Listen, at this point in human history, most of the good ones were killed off a long time ago...
Put any schmuck off the street in a place of power and they would wreck things worse than those whose families have spent centuries moving into position...
Normal people are psychopaths without power. We were apes before...do you not know what that means? The number of good people (actually good, not harmless--which is not good but naive) is getting so low, you can see the bottom of the barrel from here. | null | 0 | 1546127794 | False | 0 | ecu40w5 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecu3dz9 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecu40w5/ | 1548243794 | -5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dtechnology | t2_7gar4 | Everyone was a beginner once, and still might be in other areas. | null | 0 | 1546127807 | False | 0 | ecu41gt | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ectt8pi | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecu41gt/ | 1548243801 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | chillermane | t2_1576xa | Sure, I've only actually written two real blog posts but this one seemed to get a really positive response: https://blog.usejournal.com/programmers-vs-it-workers-7b3f285b5bcb
An editor randomly contacted me on Medium and asked if I wanted to add it to their publication which was cool I thought, but looking back I'm not necessarily sure I should have. But from my experience, Medium is a pretty good place to get started in blogging.
I'm working on a website now and once it's up I'm going to start back blogging and posting my blog posts their and x-post it on Medium. | null | 0 | 1546127893 | False | 0 | ecu4580 | t3_9ypm05 | null | null | t1_ecshrn3 | /r/programming/comments/9ypm05/want_to_know_the_easiest_way_to_save_time_use_make/ecu4580/ | 1548243847 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lobster_johnson | t2_36b2i | The `io.Reader` and `io.Writer` interfaces are an example of where this convention goes wrong. Few people seems to have actually read the documentation -- without peeking, do you know? Spoiler alert: If `Read` returns an error, *the returned byte count must still be considered valid*. This has an important implication: If it returns `EOF`, you probably also received a non-zero byte count.
This may seem obvious to some. But if you do a Github code search, it's easy to find tons of projects, even prominent ones, which actually get the semantics wrong. They'll have a loop that breaks on `EOF` and effectively ignores the last bit of data they received. I'm on mobile, so I can't give you a link, but it's easy to find.
With sum types (aka tagged unions) we would not have this problem, and we would also be free of the pesky shadowing/reuse issue that Go has, where something like `x, err := call()` overwrites an earlier error value (to some extent detectable with the ineffassign linter, but still a problem). | null | 0 | 1546128242 | False | 0 | ecu4kj9 | t3_aa3qdm | null | null | t1_ecqybu7 | /r/programming/comments/aa3qdm/please_do_not_attempt_to_simplify_this_code_keep/ecu4kj9/ | 1548244036 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1546128319 | False | 0 | ecu4nvp | t3_aap7iv | null | null | t1_ectv9af | /r/programming/comments/aap7iv/the_science_of_deep_specification/ecu4nvp/ | 1548244078 | -2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ThePowerfulSquirrel | t2_89piy | Is there any reason I should use Swing nowadays? I thought the Java ecosystem had largely moved towards JavaFX | null | 0 | 1546128372 | False | 0 | ecu4q6d | t3_aansm3 | null | null | t3_aansm3 | /r/programming/comments/aansm3/netbeans_10_released_the_best_swing_gui_builder/ecu4q6d/ | 1548244105 | 10 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | _pelya | t2_9h06v | Plan to start your own business when you're over 40.
Become an expert in some technology stack, get to know some people who make business decisions in few big companies, and start selling your services as a contractor.
Learning and managing all the paperwork sucks, you will have to adverize yourself, which is not trivial, and you will get a chance to be screwed over in new exciting business-y ways, but you won't get fired on your management's whim when you're 50. | null | 0 | 1546128430 | False | 0 | ecu4so3 | t3_aandti | null | null | t3_aandti | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecu4so3/ | 1548244136 | 14 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mrkite77 | t2_4iq0c | Beautiful. Like the palette code. | null | 0 | 1546128437 | False | 0 | ecu4sy3 | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecu34bu | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu4sy3/ | 1548244139 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Zalenka | t2_3m5gh | Electron is gross | null | 0 | 1546128541 | False | 0 | ecu4xff | t3_aansm3 | null | null | t1_ectmxug | /r/programming/comments/aansm3/netbeans_10_released_the_best_swing_gui_builder/ecu4xff/ | 1548244224 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | everyones-a-robot | t2_wrir8 | Simple, easy enough to understand, looks great with just some pixels. This makes me want to actually implement it myself! Very well written article. | null | 0 | 1546128665 | False | 0 | ecu52qr | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t3_aajb7r | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu52qr/ | 1548244290 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1546128796 | 1546182163 | 0 | ecu58cb | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecspb8b | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu58cb/ | 1548244359 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mrkite77 | t2_4iq0c | Oh man, I totally forgot about the lens effect. If I recall correctly, it was done by pre-calculating the lens distortion and putting it all in a table.
| null | 0 | 1546128826 | False | 0 | ecu59lb | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecu2x4a | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu59lb/ | 1548244374 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Thaxll | t2_59gtn | This only way you ignore an error in go is to use _ meaning that it's "ignored" on purpose, you don't have to remember anything. | null | 0 | 1546128884 | False | 0 | ecu5c10 | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ecsxiby | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecu5c10/ | 1548244406 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ny83427 | t2_2lvinf9w | If you are starting a new project than you can use JavaFX freely, however, you know that there are many many legacy projects you are involved in maintenance and you still need to know something about Swing. Actually, I even was doing something on Java Applet at 2014, and it was a project has long history and selling well. | null | 0 | 1546128887 | False | 0 | ecu5c6n | t3_aansm3 | null | null | t1_ecu4q6d | /r/programming/comments/aansm3/netbeans_10_released_the_best_swing_gui_builder/ecu5c6n/ | 1548244407 | 13 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | pleurplus | t2_radu8 | Maybe nobody should have power over other people?
Dunno about you but I can be responsible for my life without anybody having authority over me.
Things can be organized horizontally.
>The number of good people (actually good, not harmless--which is not good but naive) is getting so low
That's just like, your opinion, man...
But seriously, you have no basis to decide that and if that was true decentralized power would still be better.
If people are bad one more reason to not having other people ruling you. | null | 0 | 1546129023 | False | 0 | ecu5hvl | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecu40w5 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecu5hvl/ | 1548244477 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | thaw93 | t2_oa8gm | Maybe you're one of the better interviews at FB, but the general reputation of the FB interview process is low in my circle. It's almost all contrived leetcode questions in our experiences, such as palindrome manipulation, and not anything close to real problems.
One of my friends had an video interviewer who asked a leetcode question, then literally muted his mic and started working on his computer. Obviously, there's no way to evaluate a candidate apart from what they coded in 30 minutes if you don't pay attention.
Other friends have told stories of interviewers giving two questions in one interview slot. Unless you've seen some variation of the questions before, it's very hard to complete both (in the words of one of my friends that works at FB). Given that, it seems like some don't care about thought process and whether or not you can output the 20 lines of code they want. | null | 0 | 1546129520 | False | 0 | ecu632c | t3_aaco1d | null | null | t1_ecu0vpz | /r/programming/comments/aaco1d/things_i_dont_know_as_of_2018/ecu632c/ | 1548244739 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | scook0 | t2_3bq55 | I'm pretty sure this has been tried in the past, though I can't find the specific entry that did it. | null | 0 | 1546129705 | False | 0 | ecu6b4j | t3_aag673 | null | null | t1_ecsqcbc | /r/programming/comments/aag673/ioccc_2019_begins_official_contest_rules/ecu6b4j/ | 1548244867 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HellfireOwner | t2_2juz5fhu | "Dunno about you but I can be responsible for my life without anybody having authority over me."
Then you know nothing of yourself.
"That's just like, your opinion, man..."
Haha...
"you have no basis to decide that"
Sure do, it is called human history.
"if that was true decentralized power would still be better."
Tried that, it is called the tribal system.
"If people are bad one more reason to not having other people ruling you."
Couldn't agree more...but then, we don't have much of a choice, now do we?
You seem to think that 'them' (the ruling class) is considerably worse that the average joe mechanic...it simple isn't true....
Exactly who was it that manned the death camps during the holocaust? Trolls from underearth? Or, normal people? Just do the math...
| null | 0 | 1546129774 | False | 0 | ecu6e2c | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecu5hvl | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecu6e2c/ | 1548244904 | -2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bdtddt | t2_x8et0 | I’m failing to see how that it is of any relevance. | null | 1 | 1546129885 | False | 0 | ecu6iwn | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ecu41gt | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecu6iwn/ | 1548244963 | -1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | pathslog | t2_5k6sy | Most handy feature I use constantly is a natural history search based on whatever you typed in the current command line. For example, if you start typing `ssh` into the prompt, it will immediately suggest the most recent item from your history that starts with that. From there, you have two options:
* Press ➡️ or `CTRL`\+➡️ to accept the suggestion
* Press ⬆️ or ⬇️ to search your history for items that match by substring
​ | null | 0 | 1546129974 | False | 0 | ecu6mqr | t3_aabai1 | null | null | t1_ecrb0xf | /r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecu6mqr/ | 1548245011 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bloody-albatross | t2_cdjk3 | Note: on media.ccc.de you get dubs for all the talks. So this talk has German and French dubs and German talks have at least English dubs. So better link the original media.ccc.de video! And you can download the video there, too, if you want! (YouTube is only a one-language mirror.) https://media.ccc.de/v/35c3-9462-what_the_fax | null | 0 | 1546129997 | False | 0 | ecu6nru | t3_aalo6l | null | null | t3_aalo6l | /r/programming/comments/aalo6l/35c3_what_the_fax/ecu6nru/ | 1548245024 | 13 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | anonveggy | t2_fctg5 | What merge settings are you tweaking?
Merge conflicts are pretty simple. Did two diffs happen on the projected line? What merge settings do you intend to tweak here that conflicts don't emerge? | null | 0 | 1546130170 | False | 0 | ecu6v3y | t3_aankii | null | null | t1_ectwmw7 | /r/programming/comments/aankii/upforksh_keep_up_to_5_forks_updated_for_free_and/ecu6v3y/ | 1548245114 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ShinyHappyREM | t2_1038di | > To me the awful Windows file system performance is most notable when working on programming projects with many files.
I get reminded of that every time I install a new version of [Lazarus.](https://i.imgur.com/nEcEFjJ.png)
The solution is to not use so goddam many files. | null | 0 | 1546130290 | False | 0 | ecu705g | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t1_ecu2jt7 | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecu705g/ | 1548245177 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | BananaboySam | t2_w962w | Cheers! Just checking out your page, I saw you wrote an ANSI viewer too! Awesome! I too wrote an ANSI viewer for an art group, unfortunately it was never released because the art group disbanded :P | null | 0 | 1546130559 | False | 0 | ecu7bgq | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecu4sy3 | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu7bgq/ | 1548245315 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | taylorkline | t2_13jrwt | Post to /r/churning maybe about how you maxed your Varo referrals. | null | 0 | 1546130662 | False | 0 | ecu7frh | t3_aagxbq | null | null | t3_aagxbq | /r/programming/comments/aagxbq/how_i_used_java_to_send_emails_and_make_500_in_a/ecu7frh/ | 1548245369 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jonatasbaldin | t2_l3ewu | i've heard u like recursion | null | 1 | 1546130682 | False | 0 | ecu7goi | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecu7goi/ | 1548245410 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | shellac | t2_1oog | Sorry, my mistake. `s/Tuple/Triple/g`.
As you've noticed the issue is IntStream really. There's no `flatMapToObject` which would make it a lot prettier without the need for boxing.
Compiling to native, even with boxing, the java version was a little faster than rust. Something closer to the rust version:
IntStream.range(1, Integer.MAX_VALUE).boxed()
.flatMap(z ->
IntStream.range(1, z + 1).boxed()
.flatMap(x ->
IntStream.range(x, z + 1)
.filter(y -> z*z == x*x + y*y)
.mapToObj(y -> new Tuple(x,y,z))
)
);
was faster still (no intermediate objects). The compile times (to native, not javac) are pretty long, however. | null | 0 | 1546130796 | 1546131011 | 0 | ecu7lhb | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ectykc1 | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecu7lhb/ | 1548245469 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | errorseven | t2_456kh | You are thinking of the boomers. | null | 0 | 1546130977 | False | 0 | ecu7t2t | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecu11yy | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecu7t2t/ | 1548245563 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mrpinc | t2_5dhjc | I hope this list is on the list | null | 0 | 1546131065 | False | 0 | ecu7wso | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecu7wso/ | 1548245608 | 225 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | fabiosantoscode | t2_fyr6x | There are different merge strategies that you can select from in git config | null | 0 | 1546131083 | False | 0 | ecu7xjq | t3_aankii | null | null | t1_ecu6v3y | /r/programming/comments/aankii/upforksh_keep_up_to_5_forks_updated_for_free_and/ecu7xjq/ | 1548245619 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jonatasbaldin | t2_l3ewu | omg that's a good idea | null | 0 | 1546131260 | False | 0 | ecu854j | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecu7wso | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecu854j/ | 1548245712 | 150 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bloody-albatross | t2_cdjk3 | I just created a hard link to a file on Linux and set ACL of one and it changed the ACL of the other accordingly. So I guess that works just the same under Linux as under Windows? I would guess that for symbolic links both ACLs, that of the symbolic link and that of the target, are evaluated, since I believe symbolic links are evaluated in user space? | null | 0 | 1546131318 | False | 0 | ecu87ol | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t1_ectvi8s | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecu87ol/ | 1548245743 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | N3RO- | t2_kj39d | I envy you. I wish I could forget everything I saw from Ahoy, just to see it as new all over again. His videos are so enjoyable, so amazing. Totally worth the subscription. | null | 0 | 1546131319 | False | 0 | ecu87qt | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecspb8b | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu87qt/ | 1548245744 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | monkeyWifeFight | t2_3nh9b | > and you reuse it in more than one place.
I'm with you if you use it in multiple places, for sure - but in the single use case, I prefer the lambda. | null | 0 | 1546131572 | False | 0 | ecu8iit | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecthrge | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecu8iit/ | 1548245877 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | anonveggy | t2_fctg5 | It doesn't matter if you rebase, merge FF, merge no-ff... All of them produce the same merge conflicts. | null | 0 | 1546131734 | False | 0 | ecu8pdi | t3_aankii | null | null | t1_ecu7xjq | /r/programming/comments/aankii/upforksh_keep_up_to_5_forks_updated_for_free_and/ecu8pdi/ | 1548245961 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Ateist | t2_3d1y3 | Even in one place - it's far harder to read, and you don't get the helpful name to hint you what it's supposed to do. | null | 0 | 1546131817 | False | 0 | ecu8sx1 | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecu8iit | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecu8sx1/ | 1548246034 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ArkyBeagle | t2_r4aik | There is also an argument for not making code too clever at work as a principle. If the lambda actually helps ( and I'd think they would in practice ) then that's the way to go.
I can't say I fully grok lambdas in C++ but they look like they'd leave the code cleaner. | null | 0 | 1546131890 | False | 0 | ecu8vxr | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecrnwan | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecu8vxr/ | 1548246071 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | gvargh | t2_gqjgd | [A Haskeller explaining a monad to somebody who doesn't know Haskell](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evUWersr7pc) | null | 0 | 1546131919 | False | 0 | ecu8x5s | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ectk5iu | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecu8x5s/ | 1548246086 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ArkyBeagle | t2_r4aik | There's an awful lot of legacy stuff out there. At some point in your career, new and shiny loses its appeal, especially if you want to live outside the major tech hubs or you prefer not to try to game the latest and greatest. | null | 0 | 1546132127 | False | 0 | ecu95yr | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecrq0fc | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecu95yr/ | 1548246195 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | fabiosantoscode | t2_fyr6x | Ok, then the story is different. But there must be some thing that these settings change and we'll still investigate | null | 0 | 1546132164 | False | 0 | ecu97jt | t3_aankii | null | null | t1_ecu8pdi | /r/programming/comments/aankii/upforksh_keep_up_to_5_forks_updated_for_free_and/ecu97jt/ | 1548246216 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | SarahC | t2_396xl | I made an exe patcher in JavaScript, and did some fingerprint recognition stuff too - it's great!
Here's my JavaScript Doom version - quite a bit faster!
https://codepen.io/SarahC/pen/BvwgMj | null | 0 | 1546132203 | 1546150891 | 0 | ecu99a3 | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ect9p79 | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu99a3/ | 1548246237 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ArkyBeagle | t2_r4aik | I have learned a heck of a lot of new things in 35 years of doing this, but sometimes the old ways are actually better. This is especially true for companies that don't need the latest and greatest. | null | 0 | 1546132234 | False | 0 | ecu9amo | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecs8aks | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecu9amo/ | 1548246254 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | fabiosantoscode | t2_fyr6x | This is something we're looking into so we can build a better product, albeit separate from the one holding our repositories. We're probably going to implement bitbucket sync and gitlab too if we get the traction | null | 0 | 1546132291 | False | 0 | ecu9d4x | t3_aankii | null | null | t1_ectx6r1 | /r/programming/comments/aankii/upforksh_keep_up_to_5_forks_updated_for_free_and/ecu9d4x/ | 1548246285 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ArkyBeagle | t2_r4aik | There are a lot of people who simply shouldn't be using C++. Then again, I ran into a case where they're trying to use Python where it doesn't fit[1], so it cuts both ways.
[1] SFAIK, truly event-driven in python is impossible. And I have looked intently for years at this. | null | 0 | 1546132376 | False | 0 | ecu9gxc | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecrwf1w | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecu9gxc/ | 1548246332 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | esaprogramacion | t2_14zinu | I'm grateful that my office encourages it. I like to start my day with newsletter's I've signed up to about things like React and Node.
Some days I take my lunch break and work on stuff.
I make sure to go to my nerdy Tuesday meetup every week.
Just a few hours a week is more than enough to make lots of progress. | null | 0 | 1546132383 | False | 0 | ecu9h8p | t3_aab645 | null | null | t1_ecqse6z | /r/programming/comments/aab645/learning_to_learn_develop_skills_to_master/ecu9h8p/ | 1548246336 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | SarahC | t2_396xl | Where are you seeing that? | null | 0 | 1546132603 | False | 0 | ecu9qwk | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ect5ycf | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecu9qwk/ | 1548246455 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ArkyBeagle | t2_r4aik | Dear Lord. FWIW, I put JSON into a very specific binary data munger in a few *dozen* lines of C++. We thought we needed it for MATLAB but MATLAB's JSON handling is slow as heck. | null | 0 | 1546132611 | False | 0 | ecu9r8w | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecs87dy | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecu9r8w/ | 1548246459 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Valmar33 | t2_zbck5 | Bad comparison.
It's not like there are tons of C++ clones all competing with one another.
But, there are new languages that attempt to take C++, remove it's worst attributes, keep some of the better ones, add new concepts, and attempt to take some of the worst garbage, and transform it into something actually nice to use.
None of this would be happening if C++ were as awesome of some of its delusional proponents make it out to be.
Rust, D, and Jai, are all some of the most impressive successors to C++ ~ D and Jai will probably compete more, however. Rust is in its own category, because its not geared towards writing games. | null | 0 | 1546132718 | False | 0 | ecu9w2l | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecsqrgn | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecu9w2l/ | 1548246520 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | CrazyBeluga | t2_hqq2h | My issue with this idea is that...typing code quickly seems kind of unimportant. I feel like the actual act of typing code is a tiny fraction of the time spent in developing software.
I type at 80 to 100 WPM, so pretty fast, but I probably spend 5% of my development time typing code. The other 95% is spent thinking hard about problems, sketching notes and diagrams in my notebook or on the whiteboard, pacing the halls and throwing out ideas to co-workers, etc. I will spend days collecting my thoughts on how to tackle a problem, how to make a clean interface, etc., then half a day actually coding, then quite a few days actually testing and fixing the code.
The resulting code is almost always solid, but that's because the majority of the time was spent working on the design, not typing code rapidly.
| null | 0 | 1546132887 | False | 0 | ecua3lp | t3_aakbja | null | null | t3_aakbja | /r/programming/comments/aakbja/code_typing_tutor_write_code_quickly_without/ecua3lp/ | 1548246640 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | biensurquenon | t2_hpdxd | yeah and then there's the older people who want to go back to SOAP services | null | 1 | 1546132894 | False | 0 | ecua3vo | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ectqo5j | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecua3vo/ | 1548246644 | -5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | derdiedasdem | t2_2ko6zts7 | Horrible explanation, but I expected no less from people who are deep into Haskell and all of its terminology. Not that I don't like Haskell but these guys have a naming problem, just take a look at the list of commonly used infix operators.
A Monad is basically an interface for an of() function/method which is basically the constructor and a flatMap() method/function which is similar to map but it knows how to unwrap a nested type (basically knows how to turn Monad<Monad<T>> into Monad<T>)
Why is this interface useful?
Take a look at the Functor/Mappable interface first which I hope is well understood.
If we take a look at lists, a map method/function essentially abstracts away the iteration and replacing of values, e.g.:
[1, 2, 3].map(i => i + 1) // returns [2, 3, 4]
would replace every element in that list with the result from our function. Turns out that this can also be done for other types like Option/Maybe/Optional, Promise and Result. So it makes sense to pull out the map function into an interface so that we can write code that can replace values in any container.
But what happens when our map method returns a wrapped element instead? Like an async http request that returns another async request like this:
fetch(url)
.then(value => fetch(value))
Turns out that for many things that implement map, you can essentially write a second version of it called flatMap that knows how to unpack the function result: lists, options and streams will get flattened, promises will get chained, results will short circuit on error etc.
Now extract that thing into an interface and you can also abstract over it as well. Your container's map function (flatMap) can now also deal with functions that return a container instead of the raw value.
The last thing to do is to formalize the thing so that implementations don't do crazy stuff that breaks common assumptions about the interface (aka the monad and functor laws). You don't need to know these unless you implement your own type which happens very rarely.
You will notice that you can put any kind of code into the flatMap method/function if it satisfies the laws (common sense) and you will notice that the unpacking also allows you to combine these things in a sequential fashion (sequential because we chain the flatMap class like: monad.flatMap(function).flatMap(function) ...).
You can now also implement it for things that essentially aren't containers like Readers and Writers, Free Monad, State and IO and have them work with your code that expects a Monad. You can essentially create whatever flatMap method/function you want if you satisfy the laws. They will work like stuff you already know and you can reuse existing code.
If this still did not help you, try to use a Result or Option type in your code to get a feel for how flatMap() works. Also took me a while to grasp it for Java's Stream.flatMap()
PS: The only reason why we don't have a mainstream Functor/Monad interface is IMHO because most programming languages lack higher kinded types (e.g. think of that like being able to say: List<T<E>>) | null | 0 | 1546133111 | 1546179601 | 0 | ecuad90 | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t3_aai5ap | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecuad90/ | 1548246760 | 10 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mrami4 | t2_872pq | I'd think [register machines](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Register_machine) vs. [stack machines](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stack_machine) is on par with RISC vs. CISC, but on a different axis. | null | 0 | 1546133140 | False | 0 | ecuaeid | t3_aa23z0 | null | null | t3_aa23z0 | /r/programming/comments/aa23z0/did_you_know_that_there_are_7_types_of/ecuaeid/ | 1548246775 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | day_tripper | t2_3p8mf | Which technology stack?
Picking an area that is specific is like betting on the stock market. Sure there will always be work on legacy systems, but how do you pick which ones won’t be saturated by inexpensive labor? | null | 0 | 1546133671 | False | 0 | ecub2mj | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecu4so3 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecub2mj/ | 1548247073 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mrkite77 | t2_4iq0c | In javascript, using binary operators on a floating point number first casts it into an integer. You'll see people doing things like x = val | 0; to throw away the fractional part of val. It's like Math.floor() except it doesn't behave the same with negative values. | null | 0 | 1546133727 | False | 0 | ecub58a | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ect5ycf | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecub58a/ | 1548247105 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | harald921 | t2_fd77p | While working as an intern I was working on a product with one other intern. There were a few times where I opened up a few things he wrote and just knew that it *had* to be fixed. So I did.
It felt really weird in those cases. I more or less had to rewrite everything he did, and he took it very personal. "But it worked!" he said. Yes I guess it *technically* did work, but just because it didn't collapse and explode at first nudge it doesn't mean it's good enough.
| null | 0 | 1546133934 | False | 0 | ecubehi | t3_a6f5bk | null | null | t1_ebvax6k | /r/programming/comments/a6f5bk/the_best_programming_advice_i_ever_got_2012/ecubehi/ | 1548247249 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Valmar33 | t2_zbck5 | Create a mountain of debt? | null | 0 | 1546134031 | False | 0 | ecubivu | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecsincj | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecubivu/ | 1548247303 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | writoflaw | t2_dize0ae | Is APK Mirror the only place to get legitimate APK files? | null | 0 | 1546134113 | False | 0 | ecubmlq | t3_aa3mws | null | null | t3_aa3mws | /r/programming/comments/aa3mws/extract_permissions_and_dependencies_from_an_apk/ecubmlq/ | 1548247349 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 888808888 | t2_tf1pq | You don't know what you're talking about, Mr Underpants. Swing has rough spots, no doubt about it. The JTable + TableModel + CellRenderer/Editor is NOT one of them. It is fucking amazing, but requires you to put a little bit of thought into how it all works. You can't just do something like "table.setValue(row, col)", which is what many other toolkits allow you to do, thereby beginning a never ending battle of object synchronization between your state and the state of the GUI controls displaying that state.
Models are there so that you DON'T HAVE TO do table.setValue. You shouldn't want to do that either, because of the synchronization issues and because of the double ram usage.
Models are the the best; you tell the model how many rows you got, how many columns you got, and it queries you for a specific cell value whenever it needs to know. Boom. No sync issues, no double ram usage, just complete elegant simplicity. I can model any data objects in a table that I want as long as implements a few obvious methods: getRowCOunt, getColumnCount, getValueAt etc. If you changed your internal object state, just call "model.fireTableDataChanaged" and boom, table repaints itself (but only the cells that are showing).
I can also put any JComponent I want into a cell; ComboBoxs, radio buttons, checkboxes etc. Again due to it's use of renderers/editors.
Swing is POWERFUL. Yes that has a tiny bit of cost in terms of complexity, but you can do absolutely anything with it, and it's all nicely object oriented and "just works". You don't run into issues like only being able to set certain borders on certain controls, they all accept any border you can possibly find; or you can just paint your own border too. Compare that to MFC (for example) where that isn't the case; certain controls only have certain borders. Just an example, but you get the idea.
I also don't know why you're worried about parent and child components because you use LayoutManagers; and it's always the LayoutManager that gets called to add a JComponent.
And you shouldn't be dealing with LayoutManager's directly in this day and age either. JFormDesigner is the best GUI designer in existance, for any toolkit. It's not that terribly well known, because you have to pay for it, but it simply rocks. Don't do swing layout manualy. Use JFormDesigner or at the very least Netbean's designer. | null | 0 | 1546134137 | False | 0 | ecubnpt | t3_aansm3 | null | null | t1_ecu27sx | /r/programming/comments/aansm3/netbeans_10_released_the_best_swing_gui_builder/ecubnpt/ | 1548247363 | 10 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Valmar33 | t2_zbck5 | In this thread, and the Hacker News thread, there are examples showing how this can be done in Rust, without horrifying compile times.
This is an issue that only C++ seems to have, due to so much backwards compatible technical debt they refuse to do away with. | null | 0 | 1546134169 | False | 0 | ecubp7z | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecrg5e2 | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecubp7z/ | 1548247381 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Eirenarch | t2_46hjd | Want to reduce the risk? Pick Java. | null | 0 | 1546134194 | False | 0 | ecubqeo | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecub2mj | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecubqeo/ | 1548247396 | 14 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mrkite77 | t2_4iq0c | > unfortunately it was never released because the art group disbanded
Hah, definitely been there. I did ascii art and coding for a lot of art groups.. Shiver, Trank, Remorse 1981, and ACiD.. and there are definitely things I remember creating that I can't find any trace of. | null | 0 | 1546134205 | False | 0 | ecubqwo | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecu7bgq | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecubqwo/ | 1548247402 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Eirenarch | t2_46hjd | I've never seen an older person in the tech world fired unless the whole company was going under and they were firing pretty much everyone. | null | 0 | 1546134273 | False | 0 | ecubtx0 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecu3uo8 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecubtx0/ | 1548247439 | 16 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1546134301 | False | 0 | ecubv3z | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecroylj | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecubv3z/ | 1548247454 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 888808888 | t2_tf1pq | JavaFX is immature, or at least the available designers for it is. You also can't disable font aliasing so it's a deal breaker for people who have really good vision and need to have font aliasing turned off everywhere (me). | null | 1 | 1546134323 | False | 0 | ecubw60 | t3_aansm3 | null | null | t1_ectw9dz | /r/programming/comments/aansm3/netbeans_10_released_the_best_swing_gui_builder/ecubw60/ | 1548247466 | -2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jpgr87 | t2_4cmu5 | > Request that compiler vendors produce compile time telemetry for users, so they can profile & investigate slow compile times.
gcc and clang both support `-ftime-report`, not sure if that's along the lines of what you're looking for.
| null | 0 | 1546134358 | False | 0 | ecubxqc | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ect3wpd | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecubxqc/ | 1548247486 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Valmar33 | t2_zbck5 | His shit-tier code deserves push-back, because of the consequences on horrible syntax, horrible compile time, and insane debug build runtime performance.
I'm sure he's personally a great guy ~ it's just that this particular kind of C++ code is smouldering garbage that no sane person would ever use if they value being productive. | null | 0 | 1546134593 | False | 0 | ecuc8kg | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecsckom | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecuc8kg/ | 1548247621 | -1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Valmar33 | t2_zbck5 | Doesn't C++ process header files multiple times, for each source file it processes? That takes forever.
C has a similar problem with header files, but then, it doesn't shove the whole kitchen in header files. | null | 0 | 1546134795 | False | 0 | ecuci36 | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ectv8wk | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecuci36/ | 1548247738 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | programmerben | t2_fwept | What is programming related here? I swear this is a trash bin of the internet. | null | 0 | 1546134837 | False | 0 | ecucjw5 | t3_aapqbu | null | null | t3_aapqbu | /r/programming/comments/aapqbu/confidence_2018_a_2018_practical_guide_to_hacking/ecucjw5/ | 1548247760 | -10 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | cb9022 | t2_t2uz2su | For anyone whose interest gets piqued, the first three guys on the list (Andrew Appel, Adam Chlipala, and Benjamin Pierce) were heavily involved in the [Software Foundations books](https://softwarefoundations.cis.upenn.edu/current/index.html), which are free, and probably the best books I've ever read about computing.
Adam Chlipala also wrote the Coq manifesto, [Certified Programming with Dependent Types](https://softwarefoundations.cis.upenn.edu/current/index.html) | null | 0 | 1546134888 | False | 0 | ecucm7t | t3_aap7iv | null | null | t3_aap7iv | /r/programming/comments/aap7iv/the_science_of_deep_specification/ecucm7t/ | 1548247819 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Valmar33 | t2_zbck5 | C++ is... sane, if you know what to use, and what to avoid.
At some point, Rust and D look kinder when you actually need to make heavy use of features that C++ implements poorly. | null | 0 | 1546134912 | False | 0 | ecucnb3 | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecsayk2 | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecucnb3/ | 1548247832 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | gaearon | t2_7enqh | > It's almost all contrived leetcode questions in our experiences, such as palindrome manipulation, and not anything close to real problems.
>
We don't have palindrome manipulation questions in the _front-end_ pipeline. As I mentioned, I wasn't talking about the general software engineer pipeline (which is sadly less practical).
>Other friends have told stories of interviewers giving two questions in one interview slot. Unless you've seen some variation of the questions before, it's very hard to complete both (in the words of one of my friends that works at FB).
I give a second question when I see the person is too far off with the first one (and won't complete it in time) or when they've finished the first one early enough to have a good shot at the second one. But again, I'm only talking about the front-end pipeline. | null | 0 | 1546134968 | False | 0 | ecucpv1 | t3_aaco1d | null | null | t1_ecu632c | /r/programming/comments/aaco1d/things_i_dont_know_as_of_2018/ecucpv1/ | 1548247863 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | Older developer, or a more experienced developer?
I have known port workers that have retrained in software development, wouldn't say they are prime candidates over young people. | null | 0 | 1546134969 | False | 0 | ecucpxn | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecu1h91 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecucpxn/ | 1548247864 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mEFErqlg | t2_7rlka | No that's old joke. too easy. Next time how about those?
"Applicative functor is monoid equipped with day convolution in the category of endofunctor."
"Free functor is left adjoint to forgetful functor."
"Fix is initial object in the category of F-algebras."
/s
| null | 0 | 1546135062 | False | 0 | ecucua6 | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ecsbyf5 | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecucua6/ | 1548247918 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Valmar33 | t2_zbck5 | Ah, yes, the network effect. :/ | null | 0 | 1546135074 | False | 0 | ecucusm | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ect56xm | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecucusm/ | 1548247924 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 9gPgEpW82IUTRbCzC5qr | t2_st19b | it's hit or miss in my experience. if an older person is keeping current on modern conventions they are usually one of the best devs in the team just cause of stability and consistency of their work.
if they are the stereotypical " just let everything be a bash script" oldies then it's like pulling teeth trying to deal with them
| null | 0 | 1546135135 | False | 0 | ecucxgg | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecua3vo | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecucxgg/ | 1548247957 | 13 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | anonveggy | t2_fctg5 | These settings change the way the history is merged together. A rebase rewrites the commits unique to the ref to start facing the branch being rebased onto, effectively lining them up as if the commits were done after current head. Merge no-ff and FF both just stitch the branches together, while FF just omits the actual merge commit. | null | 0 | 1546135202 | False | 0 | ecud0je | t3_aankii | null | null | t1_ecu97jt | /r/programming/comments/aankii/upforksh_keep_up_to_5_forks_updated_for_free_and/ecud0je/ | 1548247996 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Valmar33 | t2_zbck5 | It's like C++ has ruined "low-level" languages for them.
D is a language that offers a productive syntax, while offering the same optimized performance as C++.
Network effect, I guess... and what they're taught in college. | null | 0 | 1546135208 | False | 0 | ecud0tn | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecrf4xk | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecud0tn/ | 1548247999 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | gaearon | t2_7enqh | I don't quite understand what you mean. Most of the people I interviewed _do_ finish the question. Also, many of the people we hire don't immediately arrive at the "perfect" solution — in fact, it's in the back-and-forth that we find most valuable information. | null | 0 | 1546135318 | False | 0 | ecud5tu | t3_aaco1d | null | null | t1_ecu3y6w | /r/programming/comments/aaco1d/things_i_dont_know_as_of_2018/ecud5tu/ | 1548248061 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | fabiosantoscode | t2_fyr6x | Makes sense then.
Thanks, you've saved us some time :) | null | 0 | 1546135435 | False | 0 | ecudbff | t3_aankii | null | null | t1_ecud0je | /r/programming/comments/aankii/upforksh_keep_up_to_5_forks_updated_for_free_and/ecudbff/ | 1548248130 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
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