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|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
False | txdv | t2_7ulp5 | LINQ is such a natural fit, good suggestion! | null | 0 | 1546168189 | False | 0 | ecv708q | t3_aaaa1j | null | null | t1_ecqdpou | /r/programming/comments/aaaa1j/new_net_library_for_those_who_work_with_wmi/ecv708q/ | 1548262003 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Carighan | t2_478sf | Funny as a german speaker, because "groß" means "large". Very fitting. | null | 0 | 1546168640 | False | 0 | ecv79e9 | t3_aansm3 | null | null | t1_ecu4xff | /r/programming/comments/aansm3/netbeans_10_released_the_best_swing_gui_builder/ecv79e9/ | 1548262115 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dpash | t2_5bdkm | 1 minute video to say:
* Python
* Scala
* JavaScript
* Go
* Swift
That's literally it. No justification for any of those choices.
(Oh and multiple pleas to subscribe to the channel. Not bloody likely if that's the quality of content posted.) | null | 0 | 1546168772 | False | 0 | ecv7buh | t3_aat9kw | null | null | t3_aat9kw | /r/programming/comments/aat9kw/top_5_programming_languages_to_learn_in_2019/ecv7buh/ | 1548262145 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 0987654231 | t2_1gy6bm |
>Experience is really all that matters.
Not really, someone in they bay are with less than half your 'experience' is probably earning triple what you are...
| null | 0 | 1546168980 | False | 0 | ecv7g2y | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecuji67 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecv7g2y/ | 1548262225 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Kok_Nikol | t2_h0jg3 | So, what is 'Site Reliability Engineering'? | null | 0 | 1546169274 | False | 0 | ecv7m2i | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecux3zy | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv7m2i/ | 1548262301 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | TheCanadianVending | t2_iix5d | I think the GC comment was more referring to internal engine systems for Unreal, not the game making part | null | 0 | 1546170150 | False | 0 | ecv84am | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ectrzzq | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecv84am/ | 1548262525 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | SarvasvKulpati | t2_10j4pm | Whoops, we'll change that, we only need to read data
​ | null | 0 | 1546170996 | False | 0 | ecv8lzl | t3_aaugko | null | null | t1_ecv2ywf | /r/programming/comments/aaugko/yearincode_spotify_wrapped_for_github_relive_your/ecv8lzl/ | 1548262747 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | aweczx | t2_270emt22 | Lol, seriously? JavaFX had been abandoned by everyone... | null | 0 | 1546171174 | False | 0 | ecv8pqk | t3_aansm3 | null | null | t1_ectw9dz | /r/programming/comments/aansm3/netbeans_10_released_the_best_swing_gui_builder/ecv8pqk/ | 1548262819 | -3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | wredue | t2_1rbubxg4 | The gold standard being 20/20, I can see details at 20 feet what the standard has being seen at 12 feet.
Though I can’t personally say that I am as bothered by aliasing as others. | null | 0 | 1546171212 | False | 0 | ecv8qkl | t3_aansm3 | null | null | t1_ecv01hw | /r/programming/comments/aansm3/netbeans_10_released_the_best_swing_gui_builder/ecv8qkl/ | 1548262829 | -1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Matthew94 | t2_6jzsd | Programmers have run the word awesome into the ground. Literally everything remotely good is awesome on here. | null | 0 | 1546171435 | False | 0 | ecv8vhe | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuxs79 | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv8vhe/ | 1548262889 | 44 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 888808888 | t2_tf1pq | It's uncorrected 20/20, but my eyes interpret the blurring of the fonts as "out of focus" and that gives me severe eye strain in < 10 minutes. Headaches, sandy feeling, blood shot eyes are all the result.
I'm not saying that everybody with perfect vision has the same problem, but it can affect you if you do have perfect vision.
This is only on low DPI monitors. On high quality android smartphones (and I'm assuming iphone too) where the DPI is much higher, it's not an issue there. | null | 0 | 1546171617 | False | 0 | ecv8zhw | t3_aansm3 | null | null | t1_ecv01hw | /r/programming/comments/aansm3/netbeans_10_released_the_best_swing_gui_builder/ecv8zhw/ | 1548262939 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Ameisen | t2_5qad2 | C and C++ integer promotion rules. | null | 0 | 1546171817 | False | 0 | ecv93ye | t3_a9zyp3 | null | null | t1_ecrs6o6 | /r/programming/comments/a9zyp3/thoughts_on_rust_in_2019/ecv93ye/ | 1548262997 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | malhi3 | t2_2mt02vlv | So sorry about this, I have made the change and implemented it | null | 0 | 1546171956 | False | 0 | ecv96yi | t3_aaugko | null | null | t1_ecv2ywf | /r/programming/comments/aaugko/yearincode_spotify_wrapped_for_github_relive_your/ecv96yi/ | 1548263034 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 2bdb2 | t2_2u3fjz6 | Jesus Christ. So much idiocy in that thread. It's like one giant bubble of "Not invented here syndrome".
Every time I hear the word "Pragmatic" I just assume it means "I couldn't be bothered spending 5 minutes to understand what you just said, so I'm going to call you names and then reinvent the same wheel, but worse".
| null | 0 | 1546172150 | False | 0 | ecv9b8q | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ecswocv | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecv9b8q/ | 1548263087 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | 2bdb2 | t2_2u3fjz6 | That's actually a pretty good tutorial on how to create a Monad Transformer Stack tutorial. | null | 0 | 1546172337 | False | 0 | ecv9fc3 | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t1_ecu8x5s | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecv9fc3/ | 1548263138 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | MEaster | t2_45thc | It was "webrings", wasn't it? | null | 0 | 1546172426 | False | 0 | ecv9ha9 | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuxs79 | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv9ha9/ | 1548263162 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Ethesen | t2_4ii3r | >"Fundamentally, it's what happens when you ask a software engineer to design an operations function." - Ben Treynor Sloss, VP Google Engineering, founder of Google SRE | null | 0 | 1546172426 | False | 0 | ecv9hak | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecv7m2i | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv9hak/ | 1548263162 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | malhi3 | t2_2mt02vlv | Sorry about this, we only want to read the data, I have made the necessary changes. Thanks for letting us know! | null | 0 | 1546172590 | False | 0 | ecv9ky6 | t3_aaugko | null | null | t1_ecv5jpi | /r/programming/comments/aaugko/yearincode_spotify_wrapped_for_github_relive_your/ecv9ky6/ | 1548263206 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | chronoBG | t2_3dfo8 | Frankly, it rather seems that "literally everything that has at one point existed" is awesome. And it also seems that "curated" means "half the links on this list now return a 404" | null | 0 | 1546172636 | False | 0 | ecv9m0e | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecv8vhe | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv9m0e/ | 1548263220 | 54 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | beefsack | t2_49j3b | I'm referring more to the "web directories". Rings were a very strange beast but similar in that they were also about discoverability. | null | 0 | 1546173052 | False | 0 | ecv9v7p | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecv9ha9 | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecv9v7p/ | 1548263334 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | nikomo | t2_4tulx | If jobs start disappearing, that'll literally be the only option left to prevent social unrest.
Do you really think people will just voluntarily starve to death when unemployment is at 50%+? | null | 0 | 1546173275 | False | 0 | ecva03n | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecu2b53 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecva03n/ | 1548263421 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | didzisk | t2_6hqz3 | /r/malkovich | null | 0 | 1546173310 | False | 0 | ecva0vy | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecv635b | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecva0vy/ | 1548263430 | 14 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | goldrunout | t2_b8cu0 | I think the typical use case is actually developing for Linux without leaving the Windows environment. I use it because I have to work with Windows only and Linux only programs, therefore being able to develop and run them on the same machine is convenient. | null | 0 | 1546173320 | False | 0 | ecva13t | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t1_ecutpga | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecva13t/ | 1548263433 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | BadGoyWithAGun | t2_l2l3h | Social rest is overrated. And yes, I'd rather die free than be a slave to people who won't work, or be the beneficiary of such slavery for that matter. | null | 1 | 1546173405 | False | 0 | ecva33c | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecva03n | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecva33c/ | 1548263457 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | killerstorm | t2_m827 | They blame it on "old protocol", but the actual vulnerability is in handling for JPEG. JPEG is not exactly new, but it's still very relevant.
The actual reason for 99% of RCEs is C.
This vulnerability could be prevented using very advanced programming techniques such as "array of bytes" and "bound checking". That is, if your programming language has a notion of an array, it can detect that you're copying bytes beyond the boundary of an array.
But brave C coders do not like these newfangled concepts such as array and would rather copy pieces of memory. With a typical result of corrupting memory they shouldn't have been touching.
I don't think we can get any improvement in software security until C programming will be ridiculed. We might argue about merits of functional programming, but a basic concept such as an array should be uncontroversial, and a language which has no proper support for working with arrays should be considered unfit for general purpose programming. | null | 0 | 1546173527 | False | 0 | ecva5y3 | t3_aalo6l | null | null | t3_aalo6l | /r/programming/comments/aalo6l/35c3_what_the_fax/ecva5y3/ | 1548263492 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lenticularis_B | t2_7mi6ql3 | Yo Dawg | null | 0 | 1546173757 | False | 0 | ecvab91 | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvab91/ | 1548263558 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | wean_irdeh | t2_uetxy | The first post (#1) on the GitHub issue actually mention the performance difference between running the app on /home directory and on /mnt/c directory, so it's about Native Windows vs WSL.
Or maybe I'm the one who miss the point, please point me to the post where they compared WSL and Linux | null | 0 | 1546174037 | False | 0 | ecvahmv | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t1_ecuiqco | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecvahmv/ | 1548263637 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | nikomo | t2_4tulx | You're thinking of a situation where the other half of the population is involuntarily working in order to make a living for themselves.
The reality will be that all the shit jobs will be automated to a point where the vast majority of the population won't have to do anything for food production, and the people maintaining the automation will be so highly rewarded that every robotics engineering opening will have millions of applicants.
But that'll most likely be hundreds of years away, at a minimum, so our societies will look different anyways.
We're only just now barely starting to get rid of treating people differently due to their circumstances of birth, near-universal unemployment is quite a bit further up the ladder. | null | 0 | 1546174370 | False | 0 | ecvap7d | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecva33c | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvap7d/ | 1548263731 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | BadGoyWithAGun | t2_l2l3h | >You're thinking of a situation where the other half of the population is involuntarily working in order to make a living for themselves.
No, working for your own living is voluntary by definition. Working only for the proceeds to be handed to someone else is either masochism or slavery. For me, it would be the latter. | null | 0 | 1546174480 | False | 0 | ecvarsm | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecvap7d | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvarsm/ | 1548263764 | -3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | reini_urban | t2_6n0vu | The only C5C3 talk I fell asleep | null | 0 | 1546174495 | False | 0 | ecvas4a | t3_aaux40 | null | null | t3_aaux40 | /r/programming/comments/aaux40/safe_and_secure_drivers_in_highlevel_languages/ecvas4a/ | 1548263767 | -9 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | tgaz | t2_79hgb | I once interviewed for a company with a "no jerks" policy, one of the founders told me. That sounded nice to me.
Later they told me I didn't get the job. Not sure on what grounds... I was the best candidate they had ever seen, and if they couldn't understand the 10x rock star brogrammer in front of them, it's totally their loss, amirite? | null | 0 | 1546174582 | False | 0 | ecvauax | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ectrka4 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvauax/ | 1548263794 | 7 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | zokier | t2_433w5 | There is one additional consideration for pretty printing: consistency. For example in the JSON sample, you might want to always print `favoriteColors` as multiline to have the `person` items be consistent. That would also help with "stability", in the sense that minor changes such as adding/removing elements in array would not cause the whole array to become formatted in different style.
Of course solving that would require richer representation of the data, with hints about the potential length of any children | null | 0 | 1546174634 | False | 0 | ecvavmd | t3_aalaq1 | null | null | t3_aalaq1 | /r/programming/comments/aalaq1/compact_streaming_prettyprinting_of_hierarchical/ecvavmd/ | 1548263810 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | nikomo | t2_4tulx | You do realize robots would be doing the working that is highly taxed and used to maintain the system, right?
The system could potentially even eliminate taxes for creative work, like software engineering. | null | 0 | 1546174744 | False | 0 | ecvaye1 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecvarsm | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvaye1/ | 1548263844 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | facekapow | t2_9ame94r | What the actual fuck? Thank you for this, so much. | null | 0 | 1546174750 | False | 0 | ecvayip | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecva0vy | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvayip/ | 1548263846 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | the_gnarts | t2_9ya05 | ==25888== Stack overflow in thread #1: can't grow stack to 0x1ffe801000
| null | 0 | 1546174842 | False | 0 | ecvb0v9 | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuwhb9 | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvb0v9/ | 1548263875 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | BadGoyWithAGun | t2_l2l3h | The robots would be designed, made, operated and owned by people, and you're essentially proposing to tax those people at slavery-tiers for the benefit of people they no longer need to employ to run their businesses. | null | 0 | 1546175002 | False | 0 | ecvb4yg | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecvaye1 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvb4yg/ | 1548263925 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | nikomo | t2_4tulx | No. Design, manufacturing, and maintenance could be tax-free, while the economic output of the robots themselves could be heavily taxed.
Anything a human isn't involved in, is heavily taxed. It's not a hard concept, and at this point you're honestly intentionally being dense. | null | 0 | 1546175151 | False | 0 | ecvb8n5 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecvb4yg | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvb8n5/ | 1548263971 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | delight1982 | t2_spv3t | You are a constant source of inspiration to us all. | null | 0 | 1546175244 | False | 0 | ecvbb28 | t3_aabai1 | null | null | t1_ecra4sk | /r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecvbb28/ | 1548264030 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | DHermit | t2_ovzvg | For me the WebGL works quite well on mobile. | null | 0 | 1546175268 | False | 0 | ecvbbqp | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ect340o | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecvbbqp/ | 1548264038 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | BadGoyWithAGun | t2_l2l3h | How are humans not involved? The management, board and shareholders of the businesses using robots are still human. You're not taxing robots, you're taxing them. | null | 0 | 1546175365 | False | 0 | ecvbeku | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecvb8n5 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvbeku/ | 1548264074 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | p0nce | t2_3ijyx | A lot of us using D don't use the range-style that much. But often it's not difficult to make something a range and you get \`foreach\` support. | null | 0 | 1546175557 | False | 0 | ecvbjy4 | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecrhsuz | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecvbjy4/ | 1548264140 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | schlenk | t2_jsgc | One of the major features that work really well for Windows file access is overlapped I/O. But you cannot compare that to Linux easily, as Posix AIO support is totally fucked up and everyone implements their own thread pool in userspace to do it.
So Linux tools are usually not structured around multi-threaded file I/O and do stuff more sequential, which makes the speed of single operations more important.
Or stuff like NTFS streams, e.g. windows puts some metadata into those while Linux system usually add another file for it.
Totally different models of the world. | null | 0 | 1546175576 | False | 0 | ecvbkh6 | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t1_ectgl3j | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecvbkh6/ | 1548264147 | 11 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | nikomo | t2_4tulx | There's literally zero reason to have any of those in an automated agricultural operation.
The agricultural operation itself would be state-run so there are no shareholders there, and the design and manufacturing could be handled privately with the contracts being paid from the tax money, like government contracting works currently.
Not that there's any reason to have that work done privately, we've seen exactly how badly things go when you put any part of food production in the hands of private companies, they need the government stepping in every 30 seconds to fix their shit.
Logistics is handled by automated packing machines and automated trucks. No humans needed. | null | 0 | 1546175664 | False | 0 | ecvbn0q | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecvbeku | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvbn0q/ | 1548264178 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | BadGoyWithAGun | t2_l2l3h | > There's literally zero reason to have any of those in an automated agricultural operation.
So who runs it then, and what incentive do they have to do so as opposed to burning it down and telling the slavers to go fuck themselves?
>The agricultural operation itself would be state-run so there are no shareholders there
A fully state-controlled food supply is one of the most horrifying things imaginable. Why do you want the state to be able to starve people out at will?
>Not that there's any reason to have that work done privately
A private agricultural sector has every incentive to feed people as much as they want and then some, the only incentive a state has is to give people just enough to keep them from storming the capitol, or to starve out undesirables as necessary. I'm not interested in Holodomor 2: robotic bogaloo, thanks. | null | 0 | 1546176363 | False | 0 | ecvc81a | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecvbn0q | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvc81a/ | 1548264439 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | skeeto | t2_3em9l | Thanks for testing it! I did end up [tweaking the shaders](https://github.com/skeeto/webgl-fire/commit/4c2efa15995d15fa5314dd6dbd08db5899418d18) to make it work better on mobile devices and their reduced GPU precision. | null | 0 | 1546176368 | False | 0 | ecvc86u | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecvbbqp | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecvc86u/ | 1548264441 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | It's the new Geocities | null | 0 | 1546176513 | False | 0 | ecvcd1x | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuxs79 | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvcd1x/ | 1548264500 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mdatwood | t2_h5qqe | This is a great point, and one I rarely see addressed in all of these ageism is rampant articles. The other issue, is the articles often only focus on SV, ignoring that the large majority of software is written for companies by internal teams for internal purposes. | null | 0 | 1546176524 | False | 0 | ecvcdg6 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ectyn2c | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvcdg6/ | 1548264505 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | PardDev | t2_2ltmqm60 | Hi mate!
I found this resource very useful:
This is a PDF about CLOD for Terrain Rendering https://red3d.com/siggraph/2000/course39/S2000Course39SlidesBlow.pdf
I hope I have been helpful to you! | null | 0 | 1546176579 | False | 0 | ecvcf8v | t3_aap103 | null | null | t1_ecuv3ha | /r/programming/comments/aap103/c_directx_procedural_terrain_tool_terredit/ecvcf8v/ | 1548264528 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | detroitmatt | t2_4vh8e | This annoyed me. He explains what we're doing fine, but why do it this way? Why the jump to using `return` when we already had `Just`? Why bother hiding the logic of case-statements-propogating-nothing by some stupid `=>` operator instead of giving it a proper name? Why not just give `eval` a case for `eval Nothing`? He says "We've accidentally invented the Maybe monad" but we came into this with that already defined. I'm sure there's a good reason, but it isn't explained, and the thing that always prevents me from really clicking with Monads is how useless the examples are.
They always start by explaining Maybe, which is of course so simple that on its own its pointless, and then jump to "And then from there you have the entire universe". No you just said "You can do this for lists or IO or anything you want" so show me one of those and show me why it's better. This video didn't talk about what bind and return mean, what lifting is, any of the concepts _behind_ monads, it just put a definition to the name.
Yeah, you've shown me there's things called `bind` and `return`. So what? I thought the point of functional programming over OO was to avoid having to try to wrestle Types into doing what Functions are suited for.
pseudoHaskell because I don't actually use Haskell
data Maybe = Nothing | Just x
data Expr = Nothing | Just x | Div x y
Eval :: Expr -> Maybe Int
Eval expr = case expr of
Nothing -> Nothing
Just x -> x
Div x y -> And (Eval x) (Eval y) (x / y)
And <T,R...> :: Maybe T -> (Maybe R...) -> (Maybe T -> (Maybe R...) -> Maybe T) -> Maybe T
And x0 xn... f
if x0 == Nothing then Nothing else And xn... (f x0)
which is all just a very fancy way to say
DIV=object()
# expr shall be: False, or a one-element list, or a three-element list where the element at expr[0] is DIV
def Eval(expr):
if expr:
if(expr[0] == DIV):
a = Eval(expr[1])
b = Eval(expr[2])
if a and b:
if b != 0:
return a/b
else:
return False
else:
return a
else:
False
which of course can be largely replaced with and/or chains if you prefer or move the definitions for a and b into (lambda a,b: ...)(Eval(expr[1]),Eval(expr[2])) if you're really a monster. And if you want you can wrap that list up in whatever data structure you like. | null | 0 | 1546176612 | False | 0 | ecvcga5 | t3_aai5ap | null | null | t3_aai5ap | /r/programming/comments/aai5ap/what_is_a_monad_computerphile/ecvcga5/ | 1548264541 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jonhanson | t2_gu13 | [Obligatory](https://youtu.be/StTqXEQ2l-Y).
But yes, it's like a hyperbolic version of semantic satiation. "Awesome" will soon go the way of "literally", which now apparently means "not actually" - the literal opposite. | null | 0 | 1546176669 | 1546177324 | 0 | ecvci80 | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecv8vhe | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvci80/ | 1548264564 | 15 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | happymellon | t2_4akf6 | The linked comment is where they compared Windows to Linux. WSL is Windows, and so all the points regarding Windows applies to WSL.
https://github.com/Microsoft/WSL/issues/873#issuecomment-425272829
> The IO subsystem is architected very differently in Windows than it is in Linux, with different goals in mind. Some of the major differences we have to deal with are... | null | 0 | 1546176786 | False | 0 | ecvcmbs | t3_aalc4n | null | null | t1_ecvahmv | /r/programming/comments/aalc4n/windows_file_access_performance_compared_to_linux/ecvcmbs/ | 1548264644 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mdatwood | t2_h5qqe | /u/Eirenarch said Java, not Javascript.
1) There are tons of Java jobs.
2) Many of them are very well paying. | null | 0 | 1546176800 | False | 0 | ecvcmv3 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecukyus | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvcmv3/ | 1548264651 | 8 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Hendrikto | t2_rsoye | Well, by equating old age and experience, does the author of this post not stereotype in the same way he condemns? Just in the opposite direction.
Edit: To all the people mindlessly downvoting this: Please red the [comment](https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecvhfqy/) by /u/coworker. He expressed what I wanted to say in a better way. | null | 0 | 1546176892 | 1546190426 | 0 | ecvcqdd | t3_aav9js | null | null | t3_aav9js | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecvcqdd/ | 1548264694 | -12 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | masterofmisc | t2_dqd35 | Interesting! ...now off to read up on Nano Quake! | null | 0 | 1546177067 | False | 0 | ecvcwyj | t3_aajb7r | null | null | t1_ecu58cb | /r/programming/comments/aajb7r/how_doom_fire_was_done/ecvcwyj/ | 1548264776 | 3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | caiocaio | t2_irqj6 | Not bad. | null | 0 | 1546177184 | False | 0 | ecvd1fx | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvd1fx/ | 1548264831 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | nikomo | t2_4tulx | > So who runs it then, and what incentive do they have to do so as opposed to burning it down and telling the slavers to go fuck themselves?
Automated management.
We've already automated most of the required manufacturing processes, and deployment of units has to be automated simply to scale the operations. The same system can handle picking up broken units and replacing them new ones, and the repair operations can be consolidated to one location with automated logistics.
Computers don't burn anything down unless they're told to. You're still thinking about manual labor when I'm talking about automation.
> A fully state-controlled food supply is one of the most horrifying things imaginable. Why do you want the state to be able to starve people out at will?
You need to fix your state if that has even the smallest chance of happening in your mind. Over where I live, we don't need to worry about that, though the right-wingers are slowly eating away at the system, but they're nowhere near as hard to deal with as in North and South Americas so we'll probably be able to get rid of them.
> A private agricultural sector has every incentive to feed people as much as they want
No, they only have the incentive to make as much profit as possible. Looking for example at the USA, romaine lettuce over there has been contaminated countless times because of lack of oversight. | null | 0 | 1546177314 | False | 0 | ecvd6ir | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecvc81a | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvd6ir/ | 1548264894 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | sekjun9878 | t2_96bnj | Senior Software Engineer at Microsoft in 2 years from graduating? :o | null | 0 | 1546177344 | False | 0 | ecvd7nr | t3_aarj1e | null | null | t3_aarj1e | /r/programming/comments/aarj1e/fast_and_efficient_rate_limiting_with_gcra/ecvd7nr/ | 1548264908 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1546177622 | 1546559709 | 0 | ecvdi0w | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecvauax | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvdi0w/ | 1548265036 | 9 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mdatwood | t2_h5qqe | > 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.
I do not know the details of this person, but one of the big problems is that experience is hard to measure. In many fields, age can be equated with experience. That is not so in IT.
I've interviewed many people who have lets say 5 years experience written on a resume. While they have been working for 5 years, the real experience was maybe 6 months. They got the job, figured out said job, and then just repeated that same job over and over. They haven't been learning new technologies, new methods, or improving themselves in any other way. Extrapolate this to an older worker who may have been at the same job for 10-15-20 years and you can see the issue. It has nothing to do with age, but a complete lack of relevant experience.
IME, this is how most corporate programming jobs work. I've seen it first hand, and even quit a well paying job after 9 months because I could see the future issues. There are a few ways to combat this issue:
1) Job hop. Every couple years go to a new job if you see yourself stagnating.
2) Work for a tech first company. Companies who primary product is technology (think the FAANGS), will push forward with tech. Naturally, the workers will be brought along gaining relevant experience.
3) Work for a small company. IME, a person gets more exposure in a small company, and can direct technology in ways to keep their experience relevant.
| null | 0 | 1546177677 | False | 0 | ecvdjz5 | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecv4uv3 | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvdjz5/ | 1548265061 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | varstraypl | t2_1s5y5wcf | The author does not do that. From their diction, it is clear that the author uses experienced to imply old, but not in the sense of "skilled" or "valuable", where as the work culture they describe apparently does.
A surface reading might bring up such a point as a technicality, however. Even if the author had used the term "old", the points expressed by the article would be valid, no? | null | 0 | 1546178074 | False | 0 | ecvdymn | t3_aav9js | null | null | t1_ecvcqdd | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecvdymn/ | 1548265271 | 10 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1546178095 | False | 0 | ecvdzev | t3_aavh2r | null | null | t3_aavh2r | /r/programming/comments/aavh2r/what_is_otp_in_erlang_and_elixir/ecvdzev/ | 1548265281 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | NoahTheDuke | t2_3emtf | That ship done sailed. Shakespeare used ‘literally’ for hyperbolic effect. | null | 0 | 1546178158 | False | 0 | ecve1rq | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecvci80 | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecve1rq/ | 1548265310 | 17 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | loup-vaillant | t2_3vfy2 | I didn't see the author equating old age and experience.
Even if they did, this would actually be reasonable: experience requires time, and most people don't switch careers in unrelated fields. When you see an old person, you can *guess* they are experienced in whatever it is they do, and you'd be right most of the time.
| null | 0 | 1546178234 | False | 0 | ecve4u8 | t3_aav9js | null | null | t1_ecvcqdd | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecve4u8/ | 1548265347 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | FanOfHoles | t2_2ftopua8 | You can beat me up for saying something negative, but any lesson learned after using a language for 25 days has at best anecdotal value on the level of talking about the weather. Of course, there is nothing wrong with talking about the weather, often the main purpose of any communication is *having* the conversation, the social value. | null | 0 | 1546178447 | False | 0 | ecvectw | t3_aavxpp | null | null | t3_aavxpp | /r/programming/comments/aavxpp/advent_of_haskell_thoughts_and_lessons_learned/ecvectw/ | 1548265446 | 69 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | cirsca | t2_47gs8 | > Especially to a novice. At least in order to be considered 'good code'.
the Tao is not _good_ or _bad_ for _good_ and _bad_ are just two ways of looking at the same coin/codebase. The Tao _is the code_.
</bullshit>
In my perspective, this passage isn't saying that those that understand the Tao write _bad_ code or code without _documentation_ or _blah_, but rather that those things _just happen_.
There is no "now let's write documentation" phase or "now let's make sure it is the best abstraction" phase. There just _is_. A programmer that understands the Tao just _writes code_ and that code is the Tao, both _good_ and _bad_. | null | 0 | 1546178456 | False | 0 | ecved8i | t3_aanswd | null | null | t1_ecv6g39 | /r/programming/comments/aanswd/the_tao_of_programming/ecved8i/ | 1548265452 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | tasminima | t2_q2mvk9r | Well the whole discussion came after an article about the perf problem of build times and runtime speed of debug build. Somebody reminded about the existence of function pointers, which you kind of dismissed because they can make loose some optim opportunities. On my side in the context for example of realtime systems (even very very soft realtime), I'm *highly unimpressed* by a design that has a potential for a *simple* debug build to be 100x slower, and that slowness comes from overuse of templates; because on top of that we are using an unsafe language, and I don't even want to think about the perf mess of an ASAN debug build of that kind of crap.
And your concern is legitimate if for example you need a comparison function for integers for a sort algo that is in one of your critical paths, and you have the choice between a construct and a compilation process that allows for inlining, and one that does not.
Simply there are other contexts and concerns in which function pointers and the style they induce remain legitimate, and you might be surprise about the relative lack of perf loss that you can measure in lots of cases *even* if you have no inlining (which was my very original point), which is neither strictly impossible even with function pointers into play, nor a silver bullet (and even in a non trivial number of cases not desirable)
So yeah we seem to be in line about some technical details realities, no problem about that, and let me try to summarize my spirit by: "try to use the right tool for the job".
Function pointers are not the universal panacea; neither are templates -- and neither are strictly more powerful than the other (at least in the practical sense, I've not thought about the formal one) | null | 0 | 1546178487 | False | 0 | ecveehe | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecusoab | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecveehe/ | 1548265467 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lrem | t2_5brze | It's in the title, not the body itself. | null | 0 | 1546178742 | False | 0 | ecveomc | t3_aav9js | null | null | t1_ecve4u8 | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecveomc/ | 1548265593 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | tgaz | t2_79hgb | Especially not in lead positions when hiring new graduates... That sounds like a horrible mix. | null | 0 | 1546178840 | False | 0 | ecvesfc | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecvdi0w | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvesfc/ | 1548265639 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | icantthinkofone | t2_38m87 | "She". | null | 0 | 1546178916 | False | 0 | ecvevgt | t3_aav9js | null | null | t1_ecvcqdd | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecvevgt/ | 1548265678 | 6 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | vytah | t2_52x2f | This can be only called O(log n) if the integer fits into a machine word. If you want to reverse something larger, suddenly all those shifts, ands and xors are no longer O(1).
This will still help with fast reversing of chunks of that integer though. | null | 0 | 1546178918 | False | 0 | ecvevke | t3_aavq8r | null | null | t3_aavq8r | /r/programming/comments/aavq8r/reversing_an_nbit_number_in_olog_n_time/ecvevke/ | 1548265679 | 56 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | mrexodia | t2_hmt28 | I would argue that if you never user a pure functional language that 25 days can open your eyes to a whole new world. Perhaps if you main C++ and you try python for 25 days you won’t learn much like you said. | null | 0 | 1546178968 | False | 0 | ecvexq6 | t3_aavxpp | null | null | t1_ecvectw | /r/programming/comments/aavxpp/advent_of_haskell_thoughts_and_lessons_learned/ecvexq6/ | 1548265706 | 80 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | TheGodofRock13 | t2_2joojoj2 | If it wasn't for videos for these I'd still be writing all my apps in Brainfuck. | null | 0 | 1546179120 | False | 0 | ecvf3yq | t3_aat9kw | null | null | t3_aat9kw | /r/programming/comments/aat9kw/top_5_programming_languages_to_learn_in_2019/ecvf3yq/ | 1548265813 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | DevilGeorgeColdbane | t2_k6mqy | Yes | null | 0 | 1546179273 | False | 0 | ecvfa93 | t3_aansm3 | null | null | t1_ecv1167 | /r/programming/comments/aansm3/netbeans_10_released_the_best_swing_gui_builder/ecvfa93/ | 1548265891 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [deleted] | null | 0 | 1546179575 | 1546559693 | 0 | ecvfm8l | t3_aandti | null | null | t1_ecvesfc | /r/programming/comments/aandti/older_workers_pushed_out_of_work_or_forced_into/ecvfm8l/ | 1548266039 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | titulum | t2_ejcgp | Hey that looks pretty cool! I'm going to do a little shoutout here to one of my own GitHub organisations that provides a platform for managing these kinds lists.
It's in early stages right now, but everyone is free to join the work and/or create and manage lists!
Check it out!
- https://listz.github.io
- https://github.com/listz
| null | 1 | 1546179679 | False | 0 | ecvfqfp | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvfqfp/ | 1548266091 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | michaelochurch | t2_4ocdf | This is a problem in most industries. By 32, you're expected to be on a management track. By 40, people will ask how many people you manage– not what you do. By 50, you had better have a national reputation. The whole corporate system is set up this way: *if you're so smart, why ain'chu a boss?*
Silicon Valley just accelerates it, because it builds dopey companies that don't have long-term career tracks. (That's the future of corporate capitalism, but that's another rant. Silicon Valley's only true innovation is the disposable company.) You can't really protect a specialty in the startup game: you might land the dream AI job, only to find out that your firm is pivoting to "portable back office for insurance companies" and you're going to spend the remaining 43 months of your vesting interval dealing with browser issues.
Corporate capitalism wouldn't work if the young knew how bad the odds actually were. People would not put up with it; there'd be blood in the streets. They accept startup job offers because they feel immortal (being 22–25) and because they're misled about how the regular corporate world will valuate their work experience. (This is the Paul Graham lie that if your startup fails, you can still get a VP-level job at Facebook because of what you learned.) They work long hours because they think they're building useful "career capital" when, in truth, they're only learning how to be slightly more efficient grunts (until they're replaced with shell scripts).
The entire corporate system would be overthrown, violently, if young people had an accurate sense of their real futures. This is not an exaggeration: palaces have been stormed and heads removed from bodies by generations less hopeless than this one. It does not take much. In our campaign against corporate capitalism, the truth is solidly on our side.
We all spend our adolescence in an educational system that, while flawed, is reasonably close to a meritocracy... seeing as it's a system designed by humans. People assume their corporate jobs will be similar. If people knew, at 22, how much corruption, nepotism, and anti-meritocracy exist in the corporate world, they'd take up arms and we'd see executives hanging from lampposts. Obviously, the people in charge do not want that to happen. They need the young losers who do the grunt work to think they have an honest chance. (They don't. Everything good has already been allocated to the generationally well-connected, and even an Elizabeth Holmes–level fuckup won't put them in the doghouse for more than a few years.)
It's not that the 99+ percent who get to age 40 and have nothing to show for it are losers or failures. (I'm basically one of them, though only 35.) I mean, technically we are losers– we played a game, and we lost– but... I assume you know what I mean. The system demands that we be presented as such: bitter failures, rather than the average-case scenario that we are. It wants us to slink away in shame, so it can pretend we don't exist; we were all taken to a farm upstate where we can run free.
The people at the top know that if their young "resources" come in contact with people who are in middle age, as smart as they are, and still have to work for a living... the whole ruse will collapse. The younger workers will start asking questions, like "Was it work it, to work 80 hour weeks?" (Answer: no.) Or, "What's the secret to career success?" (Answer: well-connected parents who can provide air support.) Or, "Does it actually matter to the world if I deliver Sprint 137 on time?" (Answer: no.)
There's a legend about the Buddha: in order to raise a fearless warrior-prince, he was sheltered from all signs of aging, sickness, and death until age 29. His father expelled old people from the court so his son wouldn't know aging existed. As for whether and how this was actually done... who knows? It is an apt depiction of the workplace, though. The sick and unlucky must be culled; those who are old enough to see through the long con must be discarded. This is necessary to keep the young fearless... and by "fearless", I mean ignorant. | null | 1 | 1546179683 | 1546179921 | 0 | ecvfqlv | t3_aav9js | null | null | t3_aav9js | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecvfqlv/ | 1548266093 | 67 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | spootydooty | t2_p8917vj | This is true, at least as long as we're talking about the right machine model. In practice, for arbitrarily wide numbers, bit-wise operations will surely not be O(1).
Given the right assumptions, a trivial lemma is that the maximum of the output length is a lower bound for the worst-case time complexity of an operation, which is Omega(n) here. Even allocating the mask induces this lower bound.
That being said, this does only take O(log n) iterations. | null | 0 | 1546179766 | 1546180186 | 0 | ecvftyi | t3_aavq8r | null | null | t1_ecvevke | /r/programming/comments/aavq8r/reversing_an_nbit_number_in_olog_n_time/ecvftyi/ | 1548266135 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | nxl4 | t2_24faa34o | When I'm heads-down coding, I'll usually put on some cyberpunk themed ambient dreampunk/dreamwave/vaporwave music, like:
* [新しい日の誕生](https://dreamcatalogue.bandcamp.com/album/--18) by 2814
* [ルートバックホーム](https://dreamcatalogue.bandcamp.com/album/--22) by Remember
* [Gaze](https://bludhoney.com/album/gaze) by w u s o 命 & Sangam
* [小圈子](https://bludhoney.com/album/--2) by 輕描淡寫 | null | 0 | 1546179811 | False | 0 | ecvfvpx | t3_aaw3nh | null | null | t3_aaw3nh | /r/programming/comments/aaw3nh/whats_your_favourite_programming_background/ecvfvpx/ | 1548266156 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Ateist | t2_3d1y3 | PLease allow me to disagree with you - it is harder to read regardless of your use of new features.
Reading one human readible word is much easier than trying to decipher where each bracket's partner is. | null | 0 | 1546179830 | False | 0 | ecvfwix | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecv62pu | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecvfwix/ | 1548266167 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | MCSajjadH | t2_wfe2n | r/unexpected_russell | null | 0 | 1546179944 | False | 0 | ecvg13b | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecv077y | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvg13b/ | 1548266224 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | gimpwiz | t2_4aaq1 | This is mostly inane. You sound particularly bitter and out of touch with the average lives of tech folk.
Most young tech workers expect to work for 30ish years at various companies with some ups and downs, get paid a decent wage, and use the money to fund hobbies and a decent life. Failing that, to fuck off and do something else for a living.
Most 30- and 40-something folk in tech here still work frontline-ish engineering jobs, just more senior. Some bounce around to management, many don't.
Most who are 40+ have plenty to show for it: see above - hobbies, a decent life, usually kids. | null | 0 | 1546180215 | False | 0 | ecvgcp1 | t3_aav9js | null | null | t1_ecvfqlv | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecvgcp1/ | 1548266369 | 206 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | bjs2 | t2_8bqzc | /r/LateStageCapitalism poster
Makes sense. This is the most cynical thing I’ve read in a long time | null | 0 | 1546180306 | False | 0 | ecvggm4 | t3_aav9js | null | null | t1_ecvfqlv | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecvggm4/ | 1548266444 | 75 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | InfiniteButtersVI | t2_2nl6vgfq | Outside the Valley, the average software engineer is in their 40s. | null | 0 | 1546180405 | False | 0 | ecvgktg | t3_aav9js | null | null | t3_aav9js | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecvgktg/ | 1548266497 | 454 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Itakitsu | t2_e1f4jek | That was pretty dramatic lol. I think the issues you bring up are valid but they don’t apply to everyone or every company. I’m on the younger side, but some of my best and most respected coworkers have been in their 40s/50s and still individual contributors. Both generalists and specialists | null | 0 | 1546180527 | False | 0 | ecvgq0a | t3_aav9js | null | null | t1_ecvfqlv | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecvgq0a/ | 1548266560 | 75 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | sim642 | t2_49npq | WTF is that type column supposed to even mean? | null | 0 | 1546180574 | False | 0 | ecvgrzw | t3_aauhji | null | null | t3_aauhji | /r/programming/comments/aauhji/top_machine_learning_algorithms_for_predictions_a/ecvgrzw/ | 1548266585 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jonhanson | t2_gu13 | Shouldn't that page include itself? | null | 0 | 1546180706 | False | 0 | ecvgxpw | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecux2zj | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvgxpw/ | 1548266657 | 5 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Organic_Choice | t2_2l4q0qt4 | Haskell has a lot of problems. I knew one of the leading Haskell community people who built and ran the websites all the Haskell people used; and he was sorting array and it took 60 GB of ram and he could not even predict how much ram a simple operation would take; and something that took 1 ms in C would take minutes in Haskell and it took like 1 meg of ram in C and in Haskell, it took gigabytes of ram and was crashing the server. I lost all interest in Haskell, once I learned that the top Haskell people did not even understand Haskell or how it did garbage collection or how much memory an operation would take, or even what the program was doing.
Basically, all of the Perl programmers who wrote shit code, lost their jobs to PHP and then Python developers; then the worst Perl programmers who could not use a sane language, moved from Perl into Haskell.
| null | 0 | 1546180727 | 1546181291 | 1 | ecvgyoo | t3_aavxpp | null | null | t3_aavxpp | /r/programming/comments/aavxpp/advent_of_haskell_thoughts_and_lessons_learned/ecvgyoo/ | 1548266669 | -61 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | tarsir | t2_5wg48 | [Interviews are pretty un-useful to the point of 29% being about the best we can do, and that's with a work sample test which is hardly an interview.](https://www.wired.com/2015/04/hire-like-google/)
And at Google, [their scoring in interviews and a candidate's performance have "zero relationship".](https://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/20/business/in-head-hunting-big-data-may-not-be-such-a-big-deal.html)
Sure, in software we can at least glean if a person is comfortable enough coming up with code in front of other people, but it's pretty hard to determine the things that matter in a job like your ability to come up with the most fitting form of a solution to your business problem, or how well you work in a team, or how well you learn from your mistakes so as not to repeat them, or how much time you spend being productive once you have the job, or any of a load of other possible quantifiable areas.
I don't know what a better solution would be, or if there even is one in the traditional corporate structure, but interviews...really aren't that useful, even if they are currently the most useful thing we have. | null | 0 | 1546180889 | False | 0 | ecvh5a8 | t3_aaco1d | null | null | t1_ecsgveu | /r/programming/comments/aaco1d/things_i_dont_know_as_of_2018/ecvh5a8/ | 1548266752 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | criticalcontext | t2_mq1bg | This appears to just be a list of lists. Disappointing. | null | 0 | 1546180899 | False | 0 | ecvh5og | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecux2zj | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvh5og/ | 1548266757 | -3 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Zarutian | t2_1wth | > For areas where C/C++ is used today, like where real-time latency is important, or embedded systems, or systems level code that has to interface closely with hardware,
For hard real-time latency in embedded systems C/C++ is often completely banned.
Why? Make one small change in the C source code and the compiler suddenly spews out completely diffrent machine code than it did before, rendering any previous hard won timing gurantees moot. | null | 0 | 1546180938 | False | 0 | ecvh775 | t3_aac4hg | null | null | t1_ecrkcym | /r/programming/comments/aac4hg/modern_c_lamentations/ecvh775/ | 1548266776 | 0 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | You really showed him! | null | 0 | 1546180945 | False | 0 | ecvh7ia | t3_aav9js | null | null | t1_ecvggm4 | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecvh7ia/ | 1548266780 | -22 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | lost_in_life_34 | t2_qj4xf | You can live comfortably in your 40's. Stay out of the valley. live in a place where you can buy a home and not worry about rent increases. Many places around the country like that | null | 0 | 1546180996 | False | 0 | ecvh9h9 | t3_aav9js | null | null | t1_ecvfqlv | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecvh9h9/ | 1548266804 | 46 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | coworker | t2_46sia | You should never assume an older worker is experienced. This could be untrue for any number of reasons. People do switch careers you know. Automatically assuming someone is more valuable just because they are old is no different than automatically assuming someone is less valuable because they are young. Basically don't equate age with experience nor experience with value which is what your comments are implying. | null | 0 | 1546181168 | False | 0 | ecvhfqy | t3_aav9js | null | null | t1_ecve4u8 | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecvhfqy/ | 1548266881 | 4 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | [deleted] | None | [removed] | null | 0 | 1546181183 | False | 0 | ecvhgcm | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecuxs79 | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvhgcm/ | 1548266889 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | godlychaos | t2_ljoml | No, I think that page would be included in a Wikipedia page titled "list of lists of lists of lists" | null | 0 | 1546181279 | False | 0 | ecvhk8x | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecvgxpw | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvhk8x/ | 1548266936 | 10 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jonatasbaldin | t2_l3ewu | this is just the best thing ever | null | 0 | 1546181304 | False | 0 | ecvhl8c | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecva0vy | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvhl8c/ | 1548266949 | 2 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | intrepid_i | t2_hdfav | lol | null | 0 | 1546181789 | False | 0 | ecvi33m | t3_aav9js | null | null | t1_ecvfqlv | /r/programming/comments/aav9js/how_the_valley_treats_its_experienced_people/ecvi33m/ | 1548267196 | 13 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | dokt0r_k | t2_13rs2s | 🎶Here’s a list of the things I like, this list is the list of the things I like!🎶
I like bunions on my feet that I can pick at!
I like reverse dildos and meat with fat! | null | 0 | 1546181893 | False | 0 | ecvi6tv | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t1_ecu7wso | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvi6tv/ | 1548267242 | 1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | jonatasbaldin | t2_l3ewu | well, I'm gonna make more repository-jokes, it seems that people like it | null | 0 | 1546182082 | False | 0 | ecvie1c | t3_aaqyit | null | null | t3_aaqyit | /r/programming/comments/aaqyit/github_jonatasbaldinawesomeawesomeawesome_awesome/ecvie1c/ | 1548267332 | -1 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
False | Sarcon5673 | t2_ebelr | If you already have a fixed size input (or bounded size), reversing is already O(1).
This guy is overly complicating things, and it doesn't even work as advertised when using larger inputs. | null | 0 | 1546182088 | False | 0 | ecvie89 | t3_aavq8r | null | null | t1_ecvevke | /r/programming/comments/aavq8r/reversing_an_nbit_number_in_olog_n_time/ecvie89/ | 1548267334 | 49 | t5_2fwo | r/programming | public | null |
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