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Posts
1
Comments
579
Joined
2 yr. ago

It do be like that

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  • It's not an European thing. It's an awful statistics thing.

    People see a lot more trans people on the internet than IRL. Places on the internet usually have big programming spaces. Therefore the place where ppl see more trans ppl is in programming spaces. So now they think that most trans ppl are programmers. After that, they conclude that most trans ppl are programmers. Add to it the snowball effect of memes and now you have a huge misconception about reality.

  • Ai companies will just train on these specific puzzles. Then they will claim their AI is AGI and the quality of the models will be the exact same or worse than before. They'll just have one checkmark more in their marketing.

  • A program being written in rust itself doesn't guarantee anything, but it tells you what you'll probably find:

    • Utf-8 support
    • No shenanigans with installations, dynamic libraries and such. Just download and execute.
    • Multi-platform support
    • Low resource usage.
    • semver.
    • Compile with just 1 command if you want to.
    • MIT/apache2 license.
    • No memory leaks.
    • If it crashes, at least it will probably log out something more helpful than "SEGFAULT".

    Many of those are highly positive to the end consumer.

  • I'm one of those that use PowerShell on linux.

    You can use tmux, vim, sed, awk or whatever binary you want from PowerShell. Those are binaries, not shell commands.

    You can use pipes, redirects, stdin and stdout in PowerShell too.

    I personally don't regularly use any object oriented features. But whenever I search how to do something that I don't know what to do, a clear object-oriented result is much easier to understand than a random string of characters for awk and sed.

  • For some reason we decided that a lot of formats written by computers and read by computers would use ASCII encoding instead of raw data.

    Making a json or XML deserializer case insensitive would just make it slower for almost 0 benefit.

  • I don't think it's true that it works best by doing bottom-up. I develop top-down all the time.

    Whenever you need a new function/method/struct field/enum variant, just write its name where you are going to use it. Then intellisense will complain that it doesn't exist. Press Ctrl+. (Or whatever you have keybinded to "apply suggestion") And now it suddenly exists and intelligence works perfectly fine. It will just place a todo!() or raise UnimplementedException or whatever so you don't forget to implement it later.

  • When I made my Lemmy account (the day reddit put a paywall on the API) most posts didn't even have comments (sorting by hot/popular). And it would be common to run out of new posts after a bit of scrolling. Now it looks about the same level of activity as reddit 10-something years ago.

  • Considering that using a keyword to name anything results in compiler (or worse! Interpreter) errors, and that libraries are a thing. And also that copy-pasting code from the internet is a thing. I don't think it would be a good idea to localize programming languages.