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|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
False | jondo2010 | t2_egktb | Honest question here, what are some folks typical use cases for using this WSL on top of windows? Are you developing software that was primary targeted at win and want to add Linux support?
I'm completely out of windows loop, only used Linux natively for the last ~6 years at work. | null | 0 | 1546149546 | False | 0 | ecutpga | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t3_aalc4n | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecutpga/ | 1548255796 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | semanticsemiotics | t2_1zhdg0b3 | The Crystal and self hosted ones are good. | null | 0 | 1546150503 | False | 0 | ecuum7h | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuealj | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecuum7h/ | 1548256229 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | SarahC | t2_396xl | I made an optimised version of the Doom algorithm here, too - it's quite a bit faster!
[https://codepen.io/SarahC/pen/BvwgMj](https://codepen.io/SarahC/pen/BvwgMj) | null | 0 | 1546150758 | False | 0 | ecuuu30 | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecsk2su | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecuuu30/ | 1548256326 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | SarahC | t2_396xl | Oh right..... yeah it masks the first two bits of the random number, giving a random between 0 and 3. | null | 0 | 1546150868 | False | 0 | ecuuxh2 | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecuf50h | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecuuxh2/ | 1548256368 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dankmeems | t2_n7jww | thanks, I hate it | null | 0 | 1546150914 | False | 0 | ecuuywg | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecuuywg/ | 1548256385 | 47 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | joesb | t2_33sp | Developer is paid $40/hr to make a program that, when run, probably makes $1,000/run.
Value in code being run is why company paid developers to code. | null | 0 | 1546150971 | False | 0 | ecuv0nw | t3_aalgpq | null | null | t1_ectdtkx | /r/programming/comments/aalgpq/it_is_fast_or_it_is_wrong/ecuv0nw/ | 1548256408 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Drisku11 | t2_bg6v5 | Not quite. You can't pass a `Maybe a` to a function that wants an `a`, and when using `map`, the mapped function will not be called at all if the `Maybe` is empty (which matters for side effects). | null | 0 | 1546151043 | False | 0 | ecuv2uh | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ecso9m3 | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecuv2uh/ | 1548256434 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Underdisc | t2_biv0z | Sick video. I have been working on engines for a while and I am about to start a project for doing something like this. Do you have any resources for the lod technique you used? How well does it perform for huge terrains? | null | 0 | 1546151064 | False | 0 | ecuv3ha | t3_aap103 | null | null | t3_aap103 | /r/programming/comments/aap103/c_directx_procedural_terrain_tool_terredit/ecuv3ha/ | 1548256443 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | errorseven | t2_456kh | If you care about job stability/benefits/fair pay and you are willing to fight for these for yourself and others, then consider forming/joining a Union. Are you content with at will termination, discrimination, ageism, loop hole foreign hires, etc? Only you can put a stop to this by standing together with others who share your values. Otherwise keep on as you are, and someday you may find yourself facing unfair termination and not having any recourse, realizing your age is going to make it a lot harder because the industry discriminates, looking at your 401k you realize you didn't make the best financial decisions (you aren't a stock broker after all) and you'd have ten times more if you had a pension. | null | 1 | 1546151112 | False | 0 | ecuv57h | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecutgzx | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecuv57h/ | 1548256464 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ScientificBeastMode | t2_n9cqo | r/recursion ftw | null | 0 | 1546151329 | False | 0 | ecuvc3k | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecu854j | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecuvc3k/ | 1548256548 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | SarahC | t2_396xl | Imma happy to be roasted/burned and somewhat criticised:
[https://codepen.io/SarahC/pen/BvwgMj?editors=0010](https://codepen.io/SarahC/pen/BvwgMj?editors=0010) | null | 0 | 1546151734 | False | 0 | ecuvnys | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ectqcr1 | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecuvnys/ | 1548256695 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | doomhammerng | t2_ik53w87 | Can you show me some examples of what do you find too fluffy in the article? I understand what you mean, but have trouble assessing which parts are concise and which are fluffy. | null | 0 | 1546151741 | False | 0 | ecuvo6o | t3_9ypm05 | null | null | t1_ecu346b | /r/programming/comments/9ypm05/want_to_know_the_easiest_way_to_save_time_use_make/ecuvo6o/ | 1548256698 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Kalium | t2_3jday | > If you care about job stability/benefits/fair pay
That depends what you mean by "fair pay" and "job stability". France has taken job stability to such an extreme that a lot of people my age have never had a real job because it's become too expensive for companies to hire them as such. I don't want that, though I'm sure it's great to be 45 an a union worker in Paris.
With that said, I'm absolutely in favor of making it expensive to lay off a bunch of people just to turn around and try to replace them tomorrow. Is a union the best way to do that? I'm not convinced so far. I don't expect to have, or even remotely want, a job for life the way a factory worker in the 50s might have expected.
I'm similarly hesitant on fair pay because people will tend to define "fair" in a way convenient for them. One common way is seniority. I don't agree that any given person with as much wall-time experience is automatically worth what I am. Some people with less experience are worth more than I, and some with more are worth less. The same is also true of formal education. Both are useful signals at *scale*, but no team of 6-8 devs can rely on them.
With that said, I'm *also* completely 100% in favor of making sure that no person is paid more or less for any irrelevant reason - age, gender, sex, nationality, religion, identity, character alignment, etc. Is a union the best way to do that? Given that unions are not inherently any better at being non-discriminatory, I'm not sure this is true either.
Also, I have exactly nothing against foreign hires. You're not scoring any brownie points with me there. That you would even invoke it concerns me. It certainly does not convince me that unions are a good way to prevent unfair discrimination.
> you'd have ten times more if you had a pension.
I used to live in Detroit. Now I live in California. I've seen a *lot* of unions and union pensions go very badly sideways. Let me be very, very carefully clear here: a well-run pension is unquestionably *better for absolutely everyone*. However, many have not been well-run.
At least with a 401k I'm a lot less vulnerable to being sold a bill of good so some politico and union boss can get our votes this year and screw me in thirty years. My funds are *actually* under my control in ways pension funds aren't.
----
All that said, you've made some excellent points. I'm now very interested in coming together with other people who share my values and interests! They just might not be the values and interests you might be hoping for. | null | 0 | 1546151985 | 1546153120 | 0 | ecuvv4c | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecuv57h | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecuvv4c/ | 1548256812 | 9 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Kalium | t2_3jday | It's always worth considering what could be gained by different practices! At the same time, everything has a cost in complex ecosystems.
It's worth considering that we might not *have* SSH and Linux if we'd carefully adhered to only formal and verifiable methods at every point in every development project. Never mind complex and useful things like AWS EC2. | null | 0 | 1546152537 | False | 0 | ecuwb4z | t3_aap7iv | null | null | t1_ecupw6o | /r/programming/comments/aap7iv/the_science_of_deep_specification/ecuwb4z/ | 1548257012 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ProfessorPhi | t2_84c4z | The problem with convention is that nearly all languages we develop in have mostly been descended from C. Fortran was around at the same time and it had a stranglehold on the scientific stuff and so a lot of languages used in science like R, MATLAB and Julia follow on with the 1 indexing.
The first programming language I got good in was R and then I used MATLAB before transitioning to python and C. And I was annoyed as hell too, but once I got used to it, I really really preferred it | null | 0 | 1546152727 | False | 0 | ecuwgm7 | t3_aabai1 | null | null | t1_ecug71d | /r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecuwgm7/ | 1548257079 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | kamranahmed_se | t2_hkkkp | [But do \*you\* like recursion?](https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecui96a) | null | 0 | 1546152751 | 1546177285 | 0 | ecuwhb9 | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecui96a | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecuwhb9/ | 1548257088 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | tomatoina | t2_ljjoi | Yes, I use awesome lists a lot when learning a new stack to discover tools, design patterns and best practices that I don't know yet. | null | 0 | 1546153043 | False | 0 | ecuwpnp | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuealj | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecuwpnp/ | 1548257191 | 25 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ivquatch | t2_3a6gu | Knock this shit off. | null | 0 | 1546153275 | False | 0 | ecuww6g | t3_aat9kw | null | null | t3_aat9kw | /r/programming/comments/aat9kw/top_5_programming_languages_to_learn_in_2019/ecuww6g/ | 1548257271 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | kokimame | t2_b5c6job | This is awesome. The same thing happened to wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_lists_of_lists | null | 0 | 1546153521 | False | 0 | ecux2zj | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecux2zj/ | 1548257356 | 72 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | kalas_critic | t2_569r1 | Yup, [awesome sre](https://github.com/dastergon/awesome-sre/blob/master/README.md), less platform more practice, great content | null | 0 | 1546153559 | False | 0 | ecux3zy | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuqrh0 | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecux3zy/ | 1548257368 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dpash | t2_5bdkm | And Go's error handling is horrible, making code harder to read. | null | 0 | 1546153562 | False | 0 | ecux421 | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ecu5c10 | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecux421/ | 1548257368 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1546153621 | False | 0 | ecux5mz | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecub2mj | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecux5mz/ | 1548257416 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mrkotfw | t2_bvem7 | Could you share some of those papers that discuss optimizing matrix down to O(n^(\~2))? Would this apply to 4x4 matrices?
As for cache friendly storage, we're talking about row-major matrices, yes? | null | 0 | 1546153981 | False | 0 | ecuxfah | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecsz7f1 | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecuxfah/ | 1548257536 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ivquatch | t2_3a6gu | It's not a zero sum game. Also, if you stay silent while the Boomers get screwed, you're going to get it much worse. | null | 0 | 1546154052 | False | 0 | ecuxh93 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecu02rh | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecuxh93/ | 1548257560 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | thajunk | t2_ftst9 | Isn't there already an awesome list of other awesome lists... | null | 0 | 1546154231 | False | 0 | ecuxm26 | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecuxm26/ | 1548257621 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | beefsack | t2_49j3b | "Awesome" lists remind me of what the internet was like before search engines. | null | 0 | 1546154468 | False | 0 | ecuxs79 | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecuxs79/ | 1548257696 | 174 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | stack-compression | t2_1w1eet1b | I have become a TDD convert in the past month or so. It's really improved my workflow and my effectiveness as a developer.
I don't think it makes my code bug free. Any more than static types make my code bug free. But it helps!
I am pretty sure I am at stage 1. wonder if I can skip stage 2 | null | 0 | 1546155006 | 1546155221 | 0 | ecuy5mp | t3_aaqrzi | null | null | t3_aaqrzi | /r/programming/comments/aaqrzi/stages_of_tdd/ecuy5mp/ | 1548257861 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | rhytnen | t2_3f8xv | I'd say to maintain readability and consistent style in an existing project, you should prefer project, team, org, Lang, personal. To maintain consistency through your projects, even knew code should prefer the standard in the rest of your repo. | null | 0 | 1546155381 | False | 0 | ecuyf19 | t3_aaamfb | null | null | t1_ecqgghp | /r/programming/comments/aaamfb/how_you_ever_thought_about_which_casing/ecuyf19/ | 1548258006 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | DangerousSandwich | t2_9zhghr | Not sure what that target is, sorry - I don't work on embedded in my current company. | null | 0 | 1546155485 | False | 0 | ecuyhq3 | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecsfv9v | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecuyhq3/ | 1548258039 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | davidk01 | t2_1c5pc | Certainly economics is a big issue. Most people wanted features yesterday and the software market delivered but I'm not convinced that we made the right tradeoffs. Sometimes the customer is wrong and it takes a principled thinker to create progress.
I always think of Ford and his quote about markets wanting faster horses. The irony I guess is that cars are literal deathtraps. But putting the irony aside there seems very little innovation in the practice of software engineering and we just keep making faster horses. Kubernetes is a good example of a faster horse. We could have had unikernels but enough people wanted a repackaged version of the old thing (complexity isolated in a nice POSIX sandbox) that Solomon Hykes delivered and became very rich in the process. | null | 0 | 1546155763 | 1546155976 | 0 | ecuyooj | t3_aap7iv | null | null | t1_ecuwb4z | /r/programming/comments/aap7iv/the_science_of_deep_specification/ecuyooj/ | 1548258126 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | RasterTragedy | t2_zrkyg | Row-major or column-major both run into cache problems because naïve matrix multiplication accesses one matrix in row order and the other in column order—one of those is *guaranteed* to be cache-unfriendly if you're (R|C)-major. Offhand, 4x4 matrix multiplication is *literally* what GPUs are built for: rasterization is several metric tons of 4x4*4x1 multiplications. And when your n is that small, you're swamped by constant factors not captured by raw Big-O (which only measures resource-growth-with-work-size).
As for O(n²) being a lower bound on matrix multiplication efficiency, https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrix_multiplication_algorithm has some nice numbers. n², as a summary, comes from "well, you've gotta process that many inputs to begin with".
TL:DR; on matrix multiplication is "if it's a bottleneck, use the GPU". | null | 0 | 1546155966 | False | 0 | ecuytr8 | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecuxfah | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecuytr8/ | 1548258189 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HelperBot_ | t2_owot1 | Desktop link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrix_multiplication_algorithm
***
^^/r/HelperBot_ ^^Downvote ^^to ^^remove. ^^Counter: ^^228166 | null | 0 | 1546155974 | False | 0 | ecuytxr | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecuytr8 | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecuytxr/ | 1548258191 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | recycled_ideas | t2_bpl7i | It's not that simple though.
Linux makes a bunch of assumptions about the nature of the file system. Assumptions that Windows doesn't make.
These assumptions allow certain kinds of activities to be extremely fast. In particular stat on Linux is stupidly fast, and it's really not on Windows.
Opening a file, writing to it and closing it again in Windows is fine and usually safer than on Linux. File corruption on Windows is extremely rare.
There's also some places where the Linux inode system runs up against hard limits on scaling that just don't apply to ntfs or the way Windows functions.
Unfortunately it's just really hard to do a massive meta data check in Windows and both git and NPM do that a lot. | null | 0 | 1546156518 | False | 0 | ecuz73a | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t1_ectgl3j | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecuz73a/ | 1548258353 | 12 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lngnmn | t2_13tm5q | Maybe is merely an Algebraic Data Type (Either of type AKA Sum type).
To be of the Maybe type is to be Either Nothing or Just something - data Maybe a = Nothing | Just a
Maybe Monad is a data type together with implementation of two function.
To be a Monad is to implement return :: a -> m a and (>>=) :: m a -> (a -> m b) -> m b
List is just a recursive Algebraic Data Type
A List is Either Empty or a List of something - data [] a = [] | a : [a]
List Monad is a List type and implementation of return and >>=
To be a Monad is to implement return :: a -> m a and (>>=) :: m a -> (a -> m b) -> m b
... and so on
Just this, a Type and an Interface together. Type itself is not a Monad!. Interface itself is not a Monad. The type-class (type-trait) which includes an interface and type-constructors is.
The interface implements explicit strongly-typed transition for a lazy language, which is implicit in a eager languages and corresponds to ;. In a context of a strict (non-lazy) language this interface is an unnecessary wrapping, similar to if x then True else False.
A type could *be viewed as* a monad (if it implements the interface) but it *never is* a monad. Period.
Fucking this and only this. | null | 0 | 1546156630 | False | 0 | ecuz9ve | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t3_aai5ap | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecuz9ve/ | 1548258388 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | SanctimoniousApe | t2_43tgl3e | [*Everything is Awesome!*](https://youtu.be/xGXTmcpTDok) | null | 0 | 1546156789 | False | 0 | ecuzdvx | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecue0tz | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecuzdvx/ | 1548258437 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Sedbict | t2_670l7m | If you don't really care about developing the most cutting-edge emulator, you can use any language you feel comfortable with. Get back to the project, there's nothing like the feeling of accomplishing the goals you've set yourself! | null | 0 | 1546156858 | False | 0 | ecuzfq8 | t3_aaml78 | null | null | t1_ecuo2p8 | /r/programming/comments/aaml78/rpcs3_ps3_emulator_november_2018_progress_report/ecuzfq8/ | 1548258460 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Visticous | t2_11dscu5 | I've experienced both. 40+ colleagues who are smart and adaptive, who grow over time. But, there is also this one guy who learned to program in the late '80 and who now acts surprised that our application runs like shit. | null | 0 | 1546157382 | False | 0 | ecuzsih | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecuoo7v | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecuzsih/ | 1548258645 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1546157595 | False | 0 | ecuzxk6 | t3_aat9kw | null | null | t3_aat9kw | /r/programming/comments/aat9kw/top_5_programming_languages_to_learn_in_2019/ecuzxk6/ | 1548258708 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jewnicorn27 | t2_elvfc | I have gotten most of my positions through people I know (I'm very lucky in this regard, and think good relationships are very important). Typically I work for small businesses, so my few interviews have been with management, they usually revolve around the technology I work with and how it can help with the project, specific challenges and how I would like to approach them etc. I think working with computer vision technologies involves a lot of managing expectations, helping management understand what the limitations are. Sorry I can't be super helpful with your question. | null | 0 | 1546157752 | False | 0 | ecv0142 | t3_aa91bp | null | null | t1_ecrpkh3 | /r/programming/comments/aa91bp/computer_vision_ai_object_detection_and/ecv0142/ | 1548258753 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | corsair330 | t2_5favt | How does your vision compare to a normal guy? | null | 0 | 1546157769 | False | 0 | ecv01hw | t3_aansm3 | null | null | t1_ecubw60 | /r/programming/comments/aansm3/netbeans_10_released_the_best_swing_gui_builder/ecv01hw/ | 1548258758 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | another_day_another_ | t2_29xzi6k0 | Older workers are better and they are waaaay shorter in supply. | null | 0 | 1546157779 | False | 0 | ecv01q7 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ectqo5j | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecv01q7/ | 1548258761 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | kankyo | t2_77w4q | > How obnoxious. If you believe what I've written is wrong, why assume I am lying rather than simply mistaken?
You wrote it as such. You could have written "I think..." But you stated that it has no upside as a fact. You're now throwing stones in glass houses.
> Entirely irrelevant
You replied to something other than what I wrote here. Maybe calm down before writing.
> interop
Your Google Foo has let you down. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11693299 | null | 0 | 1546157799 | False | 0 | ecv0271 | t3_aaamfb | null | null | t1_ect22bj | /r/programming/comments/aaamfb/how_you_ever_thought_about_which_casing/ecv0271/ | 1548258767 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | _WeAreAllToBlame_ | t2_2ic57x83 | Some managers would do well reading this too. | null | 0 | 1546157957 | False | 0 | ecv05z4 | t3_aanswd | null | null | t3_aanswd | /r/programming/comments/aanswd/the_tao_of_programming/ecv05z4/ | 1548258813 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | username223 | t2_1si1h | I hope it is on the list of all lists that do not list themselves. | null | 0 | 1546158011 | False | 0 | ecv077y | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecu7wso | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv077y/ | 1548258829 | 24 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | spacelama | t2_eszqz | Heh. I just spend an afternoon looking through my old Pascal programs to find my high school project from 21 years ago: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGAMMcgGXHA (screensaver kicks in at about 1:07)
My memory was that there was a bunch of assembler in there, but it turns out there were just two calls to assembly at the start and end (not documented of course), and the rest was just a bunch of direct accesses to DOS video memory. And some port calls to set palettes.
Feel free to call my old phone number after 4pm when I get home from school though, if you need a video store library that fits in 640k. I don't document all my calls to assembly though, so keep that in mind. | null | 0 | 1546158442 | False | 0 | ecv0h0p | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecsm89h | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecv0h0p/ | 1548258949 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | more_oil | t2_j7n99 | Any time I've tried to make use of one even for a slightly less popular technology it hasn't been updated in months. This is "curation". Their usual life cycle seems to be the handful of days when the creator spams it on reddit for GitHub stars. | null | 0 | 1546158591 | False | 0 | ecv0k9z | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuealj | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv0k9z/ | 1548258989 | 9 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | UNWS | t2_3e1wa | its the list of lists that do nor contain themselves. | null | 0 | 1546158678 | False | 0 | ecv0m9w | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecu7wso | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv0m9w/ | 1548259015 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | TaviRider | t2_4j58d | Good stuff. And I got a big laugh out of the domain ownership question around 27 minutes in. | null | 0 | 1546158802 | False | 0 | ecv0p28 | t3_aalo6l | null | null | t3_aalo6l | /r/programming/comments/aalo6l/35c3_what_the_fax/ecv0p28/ | 1548259049 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | PontiacThunderTitz | t2_1xlf3h | I'm still at #2 and #3. I may never leave that zone. And as for those sections of code where cohesion is low and coupling is very high, well fuck those sections of code. We have no choice but to write integration tests for those sections as best we can, and refactor them slowly, but that will be some other sprint because somehow that code works for now -- sometimes I wish it would break spectaculary so we would be forced to prioritize refactoring it. :/ | null | 0 | 1546159072 | False | 0 | ecv0v9d | t3_aaqrzi | null | null | t3_aaqrzi | /r/programming/comments/aaqrzi/stages_of_tdd/ecv0v9d/ | 1548259127 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | tonefart | t2_ywdx0 | Is it me, or do these guys don't even bother to explain how do you install this ? Am I supposed to find the exe file myself in the archive? | null | 0 | 1546159333 | False | 0 | ecv1167 | t3_aansm3 | null | null | t3_aansm3 | /r/programming/comments/aansm3/netbeans_10_released_the_best_swing_gui_builder/ecv1167/ | 1548259227 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | the_goose_says | t2_k0zrb | Awesome | null | 0 | 1546159648 | False | 0 | ecv17wp | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv17wp/ | 1548259313 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Nuaua | t2_1bg7oy23 | This is pretty good:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wbpMiKiSKm8&list=PLFt_AvWsXl0eBW2EiBtl_sxmDtSgZBxB3&index=1 | null | 0 | 1546159816 | False | 0 | ecv1bm6 | t3_aap103 | null | null | t1_ecuv3ha | /r/programming/comments/aap103/c_directx_procedural_terrain_tool_terredit/ecv1bm6/ | 1548259358 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | BitJunky7 | t2_13sifw | Are you trying to pull an aweception? Cuz the real list serves the same purpose. | null | 0 | 1546159930 | False | 0 | ecv1e1z | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv1e1z/ | 1548259388 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jmgrosen | t2_5gk1z | Small nitpick, but I don’t think Chlipala was involved with SF. (Also, fun fact: he doesn’t actually really recommend programming with dependent types unless you have a *really* good reason. Everybody fines it funny that he wrote a book about it...) | null | 0 | 1546160460 | False | 0 | ecv1pzm | t3_aap7iv | null | null | t1_ecucm7t | /r/programming/comments/aap7iv/the_science_of_deep_specification/ecv1pzm/ | 1548259535 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ygra | t2_8kizi | It's called memory-mapped files and works on any major OS. | null | 0 | 1546160714 | False | 0 | ecv1wy3 | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t1_ecuf3d6 | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecv1wy3/ | 1548259621 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | wedontgiveadamn_ | t2_fhvx0kv | No, because these lists are just star-farms that are actually useless as shit. | null | 0 | 1546160753 | False | 0 | ecv1y1n | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuealj | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv1y1n/ | 1548259634 | 13 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | SarvasvKulpati | t2_10j4pm | Hey Reddit,
We thought that the idea behind Spotify Wrapped was extremely fun- it’s amazing to look back on your year of music and see how your tastes have changed (that is, if they changed at all)
But we thought it would be great to have the same thing for Github. Wouldn’t it be amazing to see how your coding has developed over the year? How many repos you’ve made, what your best repos were, what your favorite repos were?
That’s why we made YearInCode! 🚀🚀 You can now look back on your year of programming and see how you’ve grown. This project was made over the last 2 days, and everything is open source, so, as aspiring 16 y/o devs, we’d really appreciate any feedback and more importantly, any contributions! | null | 0 | 1546160858 | False | 0 | ecv20wz | t3_aaugko | null | null | t3_aaugko | /r/programming/comments/aaugko/yearincode_spotify_wrapped_for_github_relive_your/ecv20wz/ | 1548259671 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Eirenarch | t2_46hjd | Yeah but in general there is shortage of programmers and people rarely fire theirs unless their business is doing bad. | null | 0 | 1546161295 | False | 0 | ecv2cen | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecuere3 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecv2cen/ | 1548259840 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Eirenarch | t2_46hjd | It isn't. | null | 0 | 1546161317 | False | 0 | ecv2cxf | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecukyus | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecv2cxf/ | 1548259847 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | malhi3 | t2_2mt02vlv | Hey guys, Malhar here, I'm one of the 2 makers on this project! We'd love to answer any questions you may have, and would love your contributions to the project! Thank you everybody, and happy coding! | null | 0 | 1546161485 | False | 0 | ecv2hbs | t3_aaugko | null | null | t3_aaugko | /r/programming/comments/aaugko/yearincode_spotify_wrapped_for_github_relive_your/ecv2hbs/ | 1548259901 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | txdv | t2_7ulp5 | They renamed bookmarks to awesome. That is it. Bookmark collections were the first thing that appeared on the internet. | null | 0 | 1546161488 | 1546173530 | 0 | ecv2hdz | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv2hdz/ | 1548259902 | 12 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bruh_breh_broseph | t2_1vbp2s73 | Java isn't saturated by inexpensive labor. | null | 0 | 1546161676 | False | 0 | ecv2m61 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecukyus | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecv2m61/ | 1548259961 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | fp_weenie | t2_2e56j0fa | > This is a valid criticism.
no, it's not | null | 0 | 1546161836 | False | 0 | ecv2q0w | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ectvjc6 | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecv2q0w/ | 1548260008 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | fp_weenie | t2_2e56j0fa | > That's why anyone other than Haskell programmers cares.
Haskell has monads because they handle side effects nicely. It doesn't really have anything to do with state. You can still translate programs with state/mutability into equivalents with recursion/immutability quite easily. | null | 0 | 1546161902 | False | 0 | ecv2rtu | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ecurkaj | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecv2rtu/ | 1548260030 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Nexuist | t2_bni71 | "This application will be able to read **and write** all public and private repository data."
I'm sorry?? I'm not generally a stickler for application permissions, but isn't this a bit too far? | null | 0 | 1546162181 | False | 0 | ecv2ywf | t3_aaugko | null | null | t3_aaugko | /r/programming/comments/aaugko/yearincode_spotify_wrapped_for_github_relive_your/ecv2ywf/ | 1548260118 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | error1954 | t2_3z3op | I found some neat color schemes for my terminal through one of these. Otherwise no. | null | 0 | 1546162227 | False | 0 | ecv300b | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuealj | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv300b/ | 1548260131 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | socialismnotevenonce | t2_53247c5 | It checks out in a way you couldn't even imagie for those who have experience socialism. | null | 0 | 1546162449 | False | 0 | ecv35n3 | t3_a4hmbu | null | null | t1_ebgh1ar | /r/programming/comments/a4hmbu/how_not_to_ask_a_technical_question/ecv35n3/ | 1548260201 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | MEDSTUDENTINDEBT | t2_m5aqpun | I'll offer a more abstract opinion. Windows and Linux FS are different due to historical decisions in that Windows decided it is a bad idea if you have a file open that in one program that you can delete it from another. Linux couldn't care less, and that is the root of almost of Windows' so called "problems". You know why you need to reboot your machine after Windows Update? WU can't modify files since they are in use. Linux is unsafe and unsound in my opinion here compared to Windows, but that said in the modern development world it certainly is better to have the Linux model.
Source: I used to work on the Windows Update team. | null | 0 | 1546162482 | False | 0 | ecv36gc | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t3_aalc4n | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecv36gc/ | 1548260211 | 14 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mislavc1 | t2_qnktw | Hmm sounds like a new candidate for https://github.com/mislavcimpersak/awesome-dev-fun/
Edit: added! | null | 0 | 1546162769 | 1546166886 | 0 | ecv3dri | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv3dri/ | 1548260302 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1546162781 | False | 0 | ecv3e2n | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecv2hdz | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv3e2n/ | 1548260306 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | GardenXbox | t2_2ap1hu1i | i too enjoy being paid to produce nothing of value or die
back to the counter buddy | null | 0 | 1546163140 | False | 0 | ecv3n7s | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecu2b53 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecv3n7s/ | 1548260447 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Valmar33 | t2_zbck5 | It's a trade-off, really. One isn't any better or worse than the other.
You can modify a file on disk in Linux, but the copy existing in memory is untouched. | null | 0 | 1546163712 | False | 0 | ecv421r | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t1_ecv36gc | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecv421r/ | 1548260630 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | red75prim | t2_60lnx | I'm looking for a trust fund to adopt me. Where do I start? | null | 0 | 1546163735 | False | 0 | ecv42m2 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecu2hzn | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecv42m2/ | 1548260638 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | KalebRasgoul | t2_429j8y | Is GitHub becoming Gopher?
Edit: adding reference
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_(protocol) | null | 0 | 1546163816 | 1546164146 | 0 | ecv44s5 | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv44s5/ | 1548260664 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | shoter0 | t2_bjaop | That's awesome! | null | 0 | 1546164085 | False | 0 | ecv4bwl | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv4bwl/ | 1548260752 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Kwantuum | t2_iykb2 | Anything in there about computational fluid dynamics? I've done some searching using google and such but I've found most resources to be academic papers or (expensive) books, and the few that aren't are typically very dense and dry. | null | 0 | 1546164356 | False | 0 | ecv4igo | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv4igo/ | 1548260833 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lrem | t2_5brze | Why is this even in /r/programming? TFA doesn't seem to be concerned with developers and I haven't seen many older developers being left in the cold. | null | 0 | 1546164690 | False | 0 | ecv4qvx | t3_aandti | null | null | t3_aandti | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecv4qvx/ | 1548260938 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | BboyonReddit | t2_azz3q | Woah slow down there partner, how you gonna keep track of these lists? | null | 0 | 1546164805 | False | 0 | ecv4tuz | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuiztx | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv4tuz/ | 1548261003 | 15 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | day_tripper | t2_3p8mf | Haha. I was waiting for this comment.
I was curious about how tech people are or are not approaching solutions to this topic and to understand if tech is excluded from age discrimination or not.
There was a comment about this same article on Hacker News from a guy whose wife is over 50 with similar qualifications and has a MSCS. She cant find a job.
To be honest, my anecdotal life experience tells me women over 50 are hit harder by under-employment.
| null | 0 | 1546164843 | 1546165335 | 0 | ecv4uv3 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecv4qvx | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecv4uv3/ | 1548261015 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | IntenseIntentInTents | t2_963ar | Good old DMOZ. | null | 0 | 1546164894 | False | 0 | ecv4w68 | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuxs79 | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv4w68/ | 1548261032 | 23 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | demalteb | t2_18vm8je3 | > You can still translate programs with state/mutability into equivalents with recursion/immutability quite easily.
Can you though? Isn't there always state at some level, even if the application programmer doesn't see it? At some point that pixel on the screen has to change, and that is state. At some point that RAX register will be loaded, and that is state.
I'm all for fp, but I see it as a method of controlling state (and complexity in general), rather than doing away with it. | null | 0 | 1546164900 | False | 0 | ecv4wcf | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ecv2rtu | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecv4wcf/ | 1548261033 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 1 | 1546164981 | False | 0 | ecv4yk7 | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ecv2q0w | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecv4yk7/ | 1548261061 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jmanc3 | t2_de0e7 | Startup takes a while but once you're going IDEA is literally more performant than most other text editors, let alone other IDE's https://pavelfatin.com/typing-with-pleasure/ | null | 0 | 1546165188 | False | 0 | ecv53ys | t3_aansm3 | null | null | t1_ectypia | /r/programming/comments/aansm3/netbeans_10_released_the_best_swing_gui_builder/ecv53ys/ | 1548261128 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | zitrusgrape | t2_v4959hb | so we have a sunny fun here :) | null | 0 | 1546165412 | False | 0 | ecv59mc | t3_aaqrzi | null | null | t1_ecuqfhm | /r/programming/comments/aaqrzi/stages_of_tdd/ecv59mc/ | 1548261210 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | filleduchaos | t2_7r81qd | There are many, many dev tools that have terrible Windows support (or none at all). Especially in the open source community - many devs don't even bother to think of non-*nix environments (to be completely fair, that's philosophically consistent if you believe in free software). | null | 0 | 1546165559 | False | 0 | ecv5daf | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t1_ecutpga | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecv5daf/ | 1548261255 | 11 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | OfflerCrocodileGod | t2_1whz4uyk | The permissions you're asking for are waaaay too much. | null | 0 | 1546165815 | False | 0 | ecv5jpi | t3_aaugko | null | null | t3_aaugko | /r/programming/comments/aaugko/yearincode_spotify_wrapped_for_github_relive_your/ecv5jpi/ | 1548261335 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jonatasbaldin | t2_l3ewu | what's the repo name limits on github, huh? | null | 0 | 1546165817 | False | 0 | ecv5jqw | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecv4tuz | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv5jqw/ | 1548261335 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | fp_weenie | t2_2e56j0fa | > Isn't there always state at some level, even if the application programmer doesn't see it?
If you use a good compiler the internals of various functions will be stateful. | null | 0 | 1546165888 | False | 0 | ecv5lm4 | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ecv4wcf | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecv5lm4/ | 1548261359 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Ahhhhrg | t2_5l3in | Yeah, havet looked at the code in a while, but basically a pre-computed lookup table for how to copy the pixels for the correct distortion. | null | 0 | 1546165982 | False | 0 | ecv5o2o | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecu59lb | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecv5o2o/ | 1548261388 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | ivanstame | t2_7q8jf | too meta for me :) | null | 0 | 1546165992 | False | 0 | ecv5ocy | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv5ocy/ | 1548261392 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | azlev | t2_9owox | > In a story this year, ProPublica described how IBM has forced out more than 20,000 U.S. workers aged 40 and over in just the past five years in order to, in the words of one internal company planning document, “correct seniority mix.” | null | 0 | 1546166156 | False | 0 | ecv5s97 | t3_aandti | null | null | t3_aandti | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecv5s97/ | 1548261440 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Vizixify | t2_6ajnw | I doubt kids are reading this subreddit | null | 0 | 1546166233 | False | 0 | ecv5typ | t3_aa3t88 | null | null | t1_ecpprgl | /r/programming/comments/aa3t88/software_processes_are_software_too/ecv5typ/ | 1548261461 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | monkeyWifeFight | t2_3nh9b | it's only harder to read if you're resistant to the new features and don't use them often. For me, it's much easier to read. | null | 0 | 1546166631 | False | 0 | ecv62pu | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecu8sx1 | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecv62pu/ | 1548261568 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dmke | t2_d8aja | https://github.com/eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee/eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
(edit: [A tale of 132 e's](https://linuxwit.ch/blog/2018/12/e98e/)) | null | 0 | 1546166651 | 1546175696 | 0 | ecv635b | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecv5jqw | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv635b/ | 1548261574 | 37 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lrem | t2_5brze | Tech is in a seller's market. If you have what it takes to do the job OR show promise of learning quickly, you will find a job in no time. The discrimination comes from the biological fact that the younger you are, the easier learning is.
The problem said commenter's wife probably has is that tech is demanding *current* skills you are expected to hone *continually*. My wife also has all the relevant qualifications, including MSCS, and isn't old at all. But coming back from a few years of career break, she's *assumed* to be less skilled than someone fresh out of college. I guess that would be badly compounded by age. | null | 0 | 1546166677 | False | 0 | ecv63q2 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecv4uv3 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecv63q2/ | 1548261581 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | kuzux | t2_4v4qw | The passages 2.4 and 3.2 seem to imply a fundamental difference between programmers who did not master the Tao and those who did; who shouldn't really be concerned about structure, design, testing and documentation (as understood by the novice at least). While this might be consistent with the original Taoist teachings (I'm not very familiar with Eastern Philosophy), it doesn't seem to be the case in programming at all. Any code, especially those who are written by someone who is not a novice, needs to be very clear in design, intention, and structure. Especially to a novice. At least in order to be considered 'good code'. | null | 0 | 1546167259 | False | 0 | ecv6g39 | t3_aanswd | null | null | t3_aanswd | /r/programming/comments/aanswd/the_tao_of_programming/ecv6g39/ | 1548261754 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | julesjacobs | t2_1vbw | Generality is often measured by the ability to change the behavior of code without changing the code and instead adding a new piece of code somewhere else and plugging it into the architecture. In my experience, changing non-generalised code is usually *easier* than adding code and plugging it in, and leads to a smaller code base. | null | 0 | 1546167556 | 1546168203 | 0 | ecv6mju | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ect3ruk | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecv6mju/ | 1548261833 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | _WeAreAllToBlame_ | t2_2ic57x83 | That I definitely agree with, but then again, we haven't reached the Tao, have we? | null | 0 | 1546167561 | False | 0 | ecv6mno | t3_aanswd | null | null | t1_ecv6g39 | /r/programming/comments/aanswd/the_tao_of_programming/ecv6mno/ | 1548261835 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | HolyGarbage | t2_4xv0e | It's like yeah, it works, but it seriously masks (no pun intended) the purpose. Probably the weirdest use of the bitwise and operator I've seen. | null | 0 | 1546168082 | False | 0 | ecv6y12 | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecuuxh2 | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecv6y12/ | 1548261975 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | wredue | t2_1rbubxg4 | It was how I found a few C++ things I use. Those can’t be notoriously difficult to find sometimes among the sheer number. | null | 0 | 1546168110 | False | 0 | ecv6ykq | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuealj | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv6ykq/ | 1548261982 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
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