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programmingcirclejerk
camelCaseIsWebScale
gh4o2dk
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>Not even in my browsing history.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
96
programmingcirclejerk
NakeyDooCrew
gh4qhhr
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>What is work? Is work learning? Who really does the work? Could this pie chart be an idea for a business? What is synergy? We're not afraid to ask these questions. Could asking these questions be an idea for a business? We have a logo. Join us.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
72
programmingcirclejerk
Kirkleon_
gh5ew1z
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>`from unjerk import *` Is this why repl.it has gotten so unstable and annoying recently, did some big brain startup bro take them over? I used them for a long time when it was just a nice way to get a repl up in a browser, prototype something or write an example, and send it to someone. Now it's laggy, crashes constantly, there's a million features I don't use, and I get constant emails about people building discord bots or games on the site. By all means add dependency managers and some way to monetize, but maybe focus on keeping a shell alive for more than 2 minutes before you try to become the Google docs of code.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
65
programmingcirclejerk
pupupeepee
gh4qu5b
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>And this is how you win at Twitter folks<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
40
programmingcirclejerk
Jumpy-Locksmith6812
gh55bon
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>> You can measure how prominent you are by whether saying things like this (whether true or false) provokes an automatic firestorm of abuse. From PG himself! tldr: Prominence == Trolling Capacity PG thinks their full of shit<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
39
programmingcirclejerk
BlueMarble007
gh5nwfa
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>the fuck is replit?<|eor|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>/uj its pretty nice, honestly. I use it when I teach, or when I just want to try something really quickly and I dont want to start up the entire infrastructure /rj I cant believe they didnt just port Vim using Elm and a Haskell backend. I bet these idiots dont even do the Monad<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
37
programmingcirclejerk
Theon
gh6x8nm
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>>We're the most ambitious software startup in history. >We're innovating on: > - editors > - editing code > - distributed compute (editing code) > - remote editing code > - editing code that even pre-teens can editing code > - learnable, simple editing code > - social & multiplayer editing code > - community editing code > - code editing experience > - teaching editing code experience > - studying how to edit code experience my mind is fucking blown I tell ya<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
30
programmingcirclejerk
tfehring
gh729fo
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>`from unjerk import *` Is this why repl.it has gotten so unstable and annoying recently, did some big brain startup bro take them over? I used them for a long time when it was just a nice way to get a repl up in a browser, prototype something or write an example, and send it to someone. Now it's laggy, crashes constantly, there's a million features I don't use, and I get constant emails about people building discord bots or games on the site. By all means add dependency managers and some way to monetize, but maybe focus on keeping a shell alive for more than 2 minutes before you try to become the Google docs of code.<|eor|><|sor|>uj Havent used it recently but I assume their increased focus on education is the main reason for feature bloat. /uj If youre having issues with crashing just access it over Gopher or Gemini instead of a bloated protocol like HTTP.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
28
programmingcirclejerk
0dyl
gh4x94b
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>the fuck is replit?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
27
programmingcirclejerk
VeganVagiVore
gh6v6uh
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>What is work? Is work learning? Who really does the work? Could this pie chart be an idea for a business? What is synergy? We're not afraid to ask these questions. Could asking these questions be an idea for a business? We have a logo. Join us.<|eor|><|sor|>I'm on a horse<|eor|><|sor|>You're not really ambitious unless you _are_ the hors<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
11
programmingcirclejerk
SlaimeLannister
gh79e0w
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>>We're the most ambitious software startup in history. >We're innovating on: > - editors > - editing code > - distributed compute (editing code) > - remote editing code > - editing code that even pre-teens can editing code > - learnable, simple editing code > - social & multiplayer editing code > - community editing code > - code editing experience > - teaching editing code experience > - studying how to edit code experience my mind is fucking blown I tell ya<|eor|><|sor|>We're innovating on: * Demi-conductors * Pseudopseudoelectromagnets * Retrievable, distributable lamp shades * Post-bulbism<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
10
programmingcirclejerk
ProgVal
gh6vpxy
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>Yet no blockchain or ICO smh<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
9
programmingcirclejerk
Theon
gh6wy1v
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>> You can measure how prominent you are by whether saying things like this (whether true or false) provokes an automatic firestorm of abuse. From PG himself! tldr: Prominence == Trolling Capacity PG thinks their full of shit<|eor|><|sor|>> PG thinks their full of shit I think he's actually complimenting them on being daring, bold, courageous, etc. while ignoring the haters.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
9
programmingcirclejerk
jacques_chester
gh7jqnn
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>> You can measure how prominent you are by whether saying things like this (whether true or false) provokes an automatic firestorm of abuse. From PG himself! tldr: Prominence == Trolling Capacity PG thinks their full of shit<|eor|><|sor|>@uj: one of my former engineering VPs had a gnome on his desk holding a sign. It read "sufficiently advanced trolling is indistinguishable from thought leadership".<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
8
programmingcirclejerk
junior_dos_nachos
gh7kyoj
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>`from unjerk import *` Is this why repl.it has gotten so unstable and annoying recently, did some big brain startup bro take them over? I used them for a long time when it was just a nice way to get a repl up in a browser, prototype something or write an example, and send it to someone. Now it's laggy, crashes constantly, there's a million features I don't use, and I get constant emails about people building discord bots or games on the site. By all means add dependency managers and some way to monetize, but maybe focus on keeping a shell alive for more than 2 minutes before you try to become the Google docs of code.<|eor|><|sor|>uj Havent used it recently but I assume their increased focus on education is the main reason for feature bloat. /uj If youre having issues with crashing just access it over Gopher or Gemini instead of a bloated protocol like HTTP.<|eor|><|sor|>I just spit my 1940 whiskey out. Thanks<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
8
programmingcirclejerk
eatsomeonion
gh61m2s
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>the fuck is replit?<|eor|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>/uj its pretty nice, honestly. I use it when I teach, or when I just want to try something really quickly and I dont want to start up the entire infrastructure /rj I cant believe they didnt just port Vim using Elm and a Haskell backend. I bet these idiots dont even do the Monad<|eor|><|sor|>Same, use it all the time at work when I need to test small pieces of code. Kinda surprised to find out its repl<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
8
programmingcirclejerk
VeganVagiVore
gh6v8zk
<|sols|><|sot|>We're the most ambitious software startup in history.<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/amasad/status/1342891578394882051?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>The most eligible, and most available, bachelor in all of Neo Yokio<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
6
programmingcirclejerk
umop_aplsdn
j7oczb
<|sols|><|sot|>"Looks like <year N+1> is shaping up to be a fantastic year for <disused programming language>."<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24720826<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
145
programmingcirclejerk
everyonelovespenis
g864qut
<|sols|><|sot|>"Looks like <year N+1> is shaping up to be a fantastic year for <disused programming language>."<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24720826<|eol|><|sor|>Honestly I think it's time for a career change for me - is dog wanking still a thing?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
35
programmingcirclejerk
OctagonClock
g869e7q
<|sols|><|sot|>"Looks like <year N+1> is shaping up to be a fantastic year for <disused programming language>."<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24720826<|eol|><|sor|>lol not literal quote<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
28
programmingcirclejerk
likes_purple
g86fukx
<|sols|><|sot|>"Looks like <year N+1> is shaping up to be a fantastic year for <disused programming language>."<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24720826<|eol|><|sor|>lol not literal quote<|eor|><|sor|>the real jerk is always in the title<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
19
programmingcirclejerk
duckbill_principate
g86c2bd
<|sols|><|sot|>"Looks like <year N+1> is shaping up to be a fantastic year for <disused programming language>."<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24720826<|eol|><|sor|>Honestly I think it's time for a career change for me - is dog wanking still a thing?<|eor|><|sor|>sorry, no.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
13
programmingcirclejerk
northrupthebandgeek
g86fitx
<|sols|><|sot|>"Looks like <year N+1> is shaping up to be a fantastic year for <disused programming language>."<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24720826<|eol|><|sor|>Honestly I think it's time for a career change for me - is dog wanking still a thing?<|eor|><|sor|>No, but shoveling pig shit is always in demand.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
11
programmingcirclejerk
axalon900
g86fsas
<|sols|><|sot|>"Looks like <year N+1> is shaping up to be a fantastic year for <disused programming language>."<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24720826<|eol|><|sor|>Theres a war coming Ned. I don't know when, I don't know who we'll be fighting... but it's coming.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
9
programmingcirclejerk
ztwizzle
hwr3w5
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
144
programmingcirclejerk
zerosum0x0
fz1mhh2
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>I don't know how to write Rust, I just wing it and then copypasta the compiler suggestions when I have syntax errors. This ensures what I write is always 100% fearless and correct.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
88
programmingcirclejerk
marmakoide
fz2215f
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>Tell me your coding music, I'll tell you how much you get paid. I listen to late 19t century classical music while drafting work plans for the code monkeys, you plebs. Yes, work plans is coding, a form of meta programming where you program programmers to program.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
66
programmingcirclejerk
TSM-
fz1q405
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>If I wanted to have to carefully read the documentation of every function before every time I use it in order to search for hidden pitfalls I'd be using Go. Attention is a limited resource - we need to use it wisely. And that's why heavy metal and punk rock are best for programming<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
34
programmingcirclejerk
Pastoolio91
fz1yjgg
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>I like to listen to loud music while on the toilet for the same reason - it just flows out correctly.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
20
programmingcirclejerk
babuloseo
fz1sqmz
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>I don't know how to write Rust, I just wing it and then copypasta the compiler suggestions when I have syntax errors. This ensures what I write is always 100% fearless and correct.<|eor|><|sor|>teach me your ways senpai<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
20
programmingcirclejerk
LIL-BAN-EVASION
fz1o9dx
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>As opposed to me, the only real 10xer around here, who thinks purely in machine code<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
19
programmingcirclejerk
noogai03
fz2o465
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>Tell me your coding music, I'll tell you how much you get paid. I listen to late 19t century classical music while drafting work plans for the code monkeys, you plebs. Yes, work plans is coding, a form of meta programming where you program programmers to program.<|eor|><|sor|>So you're paid to be a Lisp macro-expander?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
15
programmingcirclejerk
fp_weenie
fz1ywav
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>I don't know how to write Rust, I just wing it and then copypasta the compiler suggestions when I have syntax errors. This ensures what I write is always 100% fearless and correct.<|eor|><|sor|>> I don't know how to write Rust, I just wing it and then copypasta the compiler suggestions when I have syntax errors. The compiler is my friend, a guide. In types.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
14
programmingcirclejerk
macBoolin
fz2awh3
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>Tell me your coding music, I'll tell you how much you get paid. I listen to late 19t century classical music while drafting work plans for the code monkeys, you plebs. Yes, work plans is coding, a form of meta programming where you program programmers to program.<|eor|><|sor|>This comment is actually really funny, good job.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
14
programmingcirclejerk
fp_weenie
fz1yz1z
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>If I wanted to have to carefully read the documentation of every function before every time I use it in order to search for hidden pitfalls I'd be using Go. Attention is a limited resource - we need to use it wisely. And that's why heavy metal and punk rock are best for programming<|eor|><|sor|>> Attention is a limited resource - we need to use it wisely. Exactly, on 10x things such as hacker noon<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
14
programmingcirclejerk
fp_weenie
fz1ywol
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>I don't know how to write Rust, I just wing it and then copypasta the compiler suggestions when I have syntax errors. This ensures what I write is always 100% fearless and correct.<|eor|><|sor|>teach me your ways senpai<|eor|><|sor|>Plaudits to all involved.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
9
programmingcirclejerk
marmakoide
fz3s15z
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>Tell me your coding music, I'll tell you how much you get paid. I listen to late 19t century classical music while drafting work plans for the code monkeys, you plebs. Yes, work plans is coding, a form of meta programming where you program programmers to program.<|eor|><|sor|>My coding music is simply the sound of my fingers as they grace the Dvorak keyboard.<|eor|><|sor|>Coding in Haskell in a minimalist zen feng shui room, where you are walking barefoot. You running Arch Linux with dwm. You are unemployed.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
7
programmingcirclejerk
Noughmad
fz2rraw
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>Tell me your coding music, I'll tell you how much you get paid. I listen to late 19t century classical music while drafting work plans for the code monkeys, you plebs. Yes, work plans is coding, a form of meta programming where you program programmers to program.<|eor|><|sor|>I just listen to generic music.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
6
programmingcirclejerk
marmakoide
fz32cuz
<|sols|><|sot|>I've been programming for about fifteen years and I finally realized that the reason I can listen to loud music whilst coding is because I don't pay any attention to syntax, it just flows out correctly, in any language I know. I think of higher level abstractions.<|eot|><|sol|>http://wiki.c2.com/?RealProgrammer<|eol|><|sor|>Tell me your coding music, I'll tell you how much you get paid. I listen to late 19t century classical music while drafting work plans for the code monkeys, you plebs. Yes, work plans is coding, a form of meta programming where you program programmers to program.<|eor|><|sor|>>Tell me your coding music, I'll tell you how much you get paid. Fantastic skill that will come extremely useful, given that company policy forbids salary discussions. So, if some programmer, I'm not saying its a coworker, but hypothetical person, seems to blast horrible Balkan turbo folk tripe on their headphones while working, how much are they paid? Ballpark figure is OK I guess as long as its as precise as it could be possibly.<|eor|><|sor|>Assuming Silicon Valley or London place of employment, 70K/year, +- 3K. He never says "no" to feature request, grinds without complaining about the grunt work, no misplaced ambitions about refinement or maintainability : an excellent mercenary. His highest ambition is a fancy 90's car that goes all vrooom vrooom and a trophy wife.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
6
programmingcirclejerk
secdeal
gj93o2
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
145
programmingcirclejerk
HorstKugel
fqjy4aa
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|sor|>> If I use my neighbors computer, theres dissonance, Mr. Spector said, But on my own computer, theres zero friction between my mind and my screen.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
78
programmingcirclejerk
trump_pushes_mongo
fqkmt6s
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|sor|>I always thought the [hotdog theme](https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-KnWY3vdqs58/Wtp-BlRFYTI/AAAAAAAACiQ/knjopDUVn0w33d5mJA54Ltw9n27RZVVaQCKgBGAs/s1600/Windows-Hotdog.jpg) was the most important color scheme.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
67
programmingcirclejerk
-funsafe-math
fqkl5fj
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|sor|>False. The most important colour scheme in computer history is the default LaTeX theme, which consists of #000000 and #FFFFFF.<|eor|><|sor|>Damn straight. So many of these new generation of "app developers" (webshits using electron) don't realize that some people actually work for a living. My applications are programmed in Qt and is optimized for real life. High sunlight, dirty screens, shitty screens. My customers would kill me if I sent them some dark theme piece of shit with like 2:1 text contrast that the average webshit is pushing these days.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
45
programmingcirclejerk
etaionshrd
fqkgk6h
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|sor|>False. The most important colour scheme in computer history is the default LaTeX theme, which consists of #000000 and #FFFFFF.<|eor|><|sor|>Imagine thinking Knuth invented colors<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
37
programmingcirclejerk
duckbill_principate
fqkdi7j
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|sor|>> the 16 most prevalent colors in computer science<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
36
programmingcirclejerk
nyanpasu64
fqkl8ch
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|sor|>> Mr. Schoonover is a trueobsessive when it comes to design. He tried his hand at being a Bhuddist monk in Thailand nearly 20 years ago, but had to give it up after a great struggle with the decor of his concrete space. /uj I dislike Solarized because it has too little contrast.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
36
programmingcirclejerk
arian271
fqkju2h
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|sor|>> If I use my neighbors computer, theres dissonance, Mr. Spector said, But on my own computer, theres zero friction between my mind and my screen.<|eor|><|sor|>When I use Haskal theres dissonance, but theres zero friction between LLVM and the Rust compiler<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
34
programmingcirclejerk
stone_henge
fql4u99
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>The Church of i3 has taken responsibility for the recent attack that killed 257 Gnome users. The high priest of Gnome responds that they will not tolerate terrorism and says that Gnome has "a God-given right to fully utilize the CPU and RAM" because "CPU and RAM were created by God to be fully used by the people of Gnome" because "unutilized resources are wasted resources." The FSFN (Free Software Federation of Nations) fears that this will once again create tensions in the region. After showing that they are willing to compromise (for example by making moving the mouse not use 30% CPU) the Gnome will now likely revert to more stringent policies and again rewrite large portions of its desktop environment in Javascript.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
33
programmingcirclejerk
pareidolist
fqkrlhh
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>My preferred background color is #040404, or as I call it, "the infinite uncaring void."<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
23
programmingcirclejerk
NotSoButFarOtherwise
fql0bww
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|sor|>>Sometimes Ill see coworkers in default black text over white, Mr. \[Yale\] Spector said. I judge them, sure, but I also pity them. Like, dothey even know about syntax highlighting? Please tell me that Yale Spector is a pseudonym and/or someone from PCJ.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
22
programmingcirclejerk
stone_henge
fql3j5u
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|sor|>False. The most important colour scheme in computer history is the default LaTeX theme, which consists of #000000 and #FFFFFF.<|eor|><|sor|>Damn straight. So many of these new generation of "app developers" (webshits using electron) don't realize that some people actually work for a living. My applications are programmed in Qt and is optimized for real life. High sunlight, dirty screens, shitty screens. My customers would kill me if I sent them some dark theme piece of shit with like 2:1 text contrast that the average webshit is pushing these days.<|eor|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>The best solution is probably to let users choose a color theme. It's good that darkmode is becoming a standard option these days. High/low ontrast shoud probably be another one. If there is only one choice a high contrast blackish on white is perferable (according to science) but as you add customizations more eyes and brains will have an easier time with the product. I prefer solarized kind of contrast because I stare at text all day long in a very well lit room with a strongly backlit monitor with no sun coming from the back ever, I wouldnt want that for my phone though.<|eor|><|sor|>who needs dark mode when you can just tell x11 to invert all colors?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
22
programmingcirclejerk
190n
fqkjdwp
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|sor|>/uj I couldnt care less what it looked like but its the one theme that every editor will have so its consistent at least<|eor|><|sor|>I think most have Monokai as well.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
17
programmingcirclejerk
stone_henge
fql48jw
<|sols|><|sot|>" Solarized, the Most Important Color Scheme in Computer History"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/planetemacs/comments/giwuys/meet_the_man_behind_solarized_the_most_important/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x<|eol|><|sor|>False. The most important colour scheme in computer history is the default LaTeX theme, which consists of #000000 and #FFFFFF.<|eor|><|sor|>Damn straight. So many of these new generation of "app developers" (webshits using electron) don't realize that some people actually work for a living. My applications are programmed in Qt and is optimized for real life. High sunlight, dirty screens, shitty screens. My customers would kill me if I sent them some dark theme piece of shit with like 2:1 text contrast that the average webshit is pushing these days.<|eor|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>when the site was literally perfect after two clicks i knew that i was in for a ride. when i could barely read the syntax colored code snippets after another few i had to get off and stare at a CGA 16 color text screen for a while<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
17
programmingcirclejerk
camelCaseIsWebScale
gibz0s
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
148
programmingcirclejerk
Stargateur
fqdrlwx
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>programmingcirclejerk is a form of garbage collection<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
173
programmingcirclejerk
ryeguy
fqdv85j
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>`rm -rf /usr/local/go` is a form of garbage collection<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
120
programmingcirclejerk
NakeyDooCrew
fqe0iwl
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>As long as the garbage is hand-collected by master software artisans I don't see a problem. It becomes immoral when the garbage collection is easy to do or even automated. Modern western software is decadent in this regard.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
70
programmingcirclejerk
camelCaseIsWebScale
fqdy2cv
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>programmingcirclejerk is a form of garbage collection<|eor|><|sor|>Whats the performance impact of that?<|eor|><|soopr|>Pause times of half an hour to two hours even if I have to study for an exam..<|eoopr|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
70
programmingcirclejerk
jxub
fqe7p65
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>`rm -rf /usr/local/go` is a form of garbage collection<|eor|><|sor|>Also `cargo uninstall npm`<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
41
programmingcirclejerk
wheypoint
fqf88oh
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>/uj Typically "garbage collection" is short-hand for "automatic garbage collection" so this is technically correct if poorly applied<|eor|><|sor|> I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're referring to as garbage collection, is in fact, automatic garbage collection, or as I've recently taken to calling it, automatic plus garbage collection. garbage collection is not an memory management system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning automatic system made useful by the automatic deallocation system components comprising a full garbage collector as defined by JAVA. Many computer users run a modified version of the automatic garbage collection system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GC which is widely used today is often called "garbage collection", and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the garbage collection system, developed using malloc. There really is a garbage collection, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use. garbage collection is the malloc/free: the program in the system that allocates the machine's resources to the other programs that you run. The malloc is an essential part of an memory management system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete memory management system. garbage collection is normally used in combination with the automatic memory management system: the whole system is basically automatic with garbage collection added, or automatic garbage collection. All the so-called "garbage collection" distributions are really distributions of automatic garbage collection.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
41
programmingcirclejerk
EpicDaNoob
fqdyax3
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>Buy new computer when memory full.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
39
programmingcirclejerk
qqwy
fqdw6ls
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>Missing the leading " is a form of memory leaking...<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
39
programmingcirclejerk
EmCeeStanky
fqe1ui3
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>going up the stack from a return is garbage collection<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
38
programmingcirclejerk
procsyma
fqej8b3
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>`rm -rf /usr/local/go` is a form of garbage collection<|eor|><|sor|>Also `cargo uninstall npm`<|eor|><|sor|>[removed]<|eor|><|sor|>Proggit is that way ----><|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
36
programmingcirclejerk
camelCaseIsWebScale
fqe0xxl
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>As long as the garbage is hand-collected by master software artisans I don't see a problem. It becomes immoral when the garbage collection is easy to do or even automated. Modern western software is decadent in this regard.<|eor|><|soopr|>I am from east and at least you have master software artisans in west.<|eoopr|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
27
programmingcirclejerk
camelCaseIsWebScale
fqe16od
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>Buy new computer when memory full.<|eor|><|soopr|>I have a sufficiently smart compiler which optimizes this to a restart. Only thing is you shouldn't use system allocator.<|eoopr|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
26
programmingcirclejerk
camelCaseIsWebScale
fqe47fo
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>going up the stack from a return is garbage collection<|eor|><|soopr|>This is why recursive functions are slow<|eoopr|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
26
programmingcirclejerk
AprilSpektra
fqehfb7
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>>having a power off switch is GC This guy gets it, but he forgot the final level where the computer getting vaporized when the missile it's controlling hits its target is GC<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
19
programmingcirclejerk
Isildun
fqe52z6
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>Buy new computer when memory full.<|eor|><|sor|>Throwing out the old computer is a form of garbage collection.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
18
programmingcirclejerk
brotatowolf
fqee14t
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>As long as the garbage is hand-collected by master software artisans I don't see a problem. It becomes immoral when the garbage collection is easy to do or even automated. Modern western software is decadent in this regard.<|eor|><|sor|>Superior high-carbon manual memory management functions have to be called thousands of times<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
17
programmingcirclejerk
theangeryemacsshibe
fqfhbaz
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>`rm -rf /usr/local/go` is a form of garbage collection<|eor|><|sor|>Also `cargo uninstall npm`<|eor|><|sor|>>`cargo` SSDs have garbage collection, my `/` is on a SSD, checkmate rustaceans<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
16
programmingcirclejerk
duckbill_principate
fqe53d2
<|sols|><|sot|>Malloc/free are a form of garbage collection"<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/comments/ghkkn7/comment/fqbjf61?context=3<|eol|><|sor|>programmingcirclejerk is a form of garbage collection<|eor|><|sor|>Whats the performance impact of that?<|eor|><|sor|>With every garbage collection cycle, /u/jacques_chesters powers grow stronger.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
15
programmingcirclejerk
silentrunningfan
esy6dk
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
146
programmingcirclejerk
BarefootUnicorn
ffd2lnx
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|sor|>Why is this fat smelly guy with a beard looking at me funny when I'm clicking around with my mouse in my big fat IDE?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
95
programmingcirclejerk
unfixpoint
ffd04hm
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|sor|>To be fair, you have to have a very high IQ to understand Emacs. The keymap is extremely subtle, and without a solid grasp of theoretical physics most of the functionality will go over a typical user's head. There's also Stallman's nihilistic outlook, which is deftly woven into his characterisation - his personal philosophy draws heavily from the United States Declaration of Independence, for instance. The fans understand this stuff; they have the intellectual capacity to truly appreciate the depths of this functionality, to realize that they're not just useful- they say something deep about LIFE. As a consequence people who dislike Emacs truly ARE idiots- of course they wouldn't appreciate, for instance, the ideology in Stallman's existencial catchphrase "I eat shit off my feet," which itself is a cryptic reference to Raymond's epic The Cathedral and the Bazaar. I'm smirking right now just imagining one of those addlepated simpletons scratching their heads in confusion as Guy L. Steele's genius unfolds itself on their computer screens. What fools... how I pity them. And yes by the way, I DO have a Saint IGNUcius tattoo. And no, you cannot see it. It's for the ladies' eyes only- And even they have to demonstrate that they're within 5 IQ points of my own (preferably lower) beforehand.<|eor|><|sor|>I agree (don't have the tattoo though), but I'd just like to interject for moment. What you're refering to as Emacs, is in fact, GNU Emacs.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
67
programmingcirclejerk
quicknir
ffd1zz6
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|sor|>Yeah, IDE users don't have anything like helm projectile. No sir, they do not have a keyboard shortcut that brings up a panel where they can type and fuzzy search for a file. No sir, that functionality has not existed in Eclipse far predating helm, nope nope nope.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
48
programmingcirclejerk
CXI
ffdlnhg
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|sor|>List of acceptable Emacs input methods: * 3D SpaceMouse * Doug Englebart's original chorded keyboard * Dual arcade joysticks * Novation Launchpad * Voice recognition (if the control characters have cool names like scratch and slap) * EEG (implanted only, no wearable posers) * Minority Report (for impressing the babes/president) * Sign language maybe? I read a book once where spies talked in sign language and that was pretty cool * Vive controller (for private time)<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
42
programmingcirclejerk
emelpy
ffdf43n
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|sor|>\* please don't be vim, please don't be vim * &nbsp; Nice<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
35
programmingcirclejerk
TheRealAsh01
ffdu2g3
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|sor|>\* please don't be vim, please don't be vim * &nbsp; Nice<|eor|><|sor|>Vim users can only look on in awe at the sheer volume of the emacs user's neckbeard, disbelief at its length as they watch the superior specimen browse their email within their text editor.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
30
programmingcirclejerk
spookthesunset
ffe01e0
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|sor|>Why is this fat smelly guy with a beard looking at me funny when I'm clicking around with my mouse in my big fat IDE?<|eor|><|sor|>The smell is to repell lusers and people who put passwords on the lab's time-sharing machines.<|eor|><|sor|>Sometimes a few of the users try to hold total power over all the rest. For example, in 1984, a few users at the MIT AI lab decided to seize power by changing the operator password on the Twenex system and keeping it secret from everyone else. (I was able to thwart this coup and give power back to the users by patching the kernel, but I wouldnt know how to do that in Unix.) However, occasionally the rulers do tell someone. Under the usual su mechanism, once someone learns the root password who sympathizes with the ordinary users, he or she can tell the rest. The wheel group feature would make this impossible, and thus cement the power of the rulers. Im on the side of the masses, not that of the rulers. If you are used to supporting the bosses and sysadmins in whatever they do, you might find this idea strange at first.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
29
programmingcirclejerk
affectation_man
ffdn67i
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|sor|>Yeah, IDE users don't have anything like helm projectile. No sir, they do not have a keyboard shortcut that brings up a panel where they can type and fuzzy search for a file. No sir, that functionality has not existed in Eclipse far predating helm, nope nope nope.<|eor|><|sor|>It has to take place inside an emulator of a 1970s DEC Terminal to be relevant. Don't ask why, it just does, ok?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
26
programmingcirclejerk
khizoa
ffd093n
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|sor|>To be fair, you have to have a very high IQ to understand Emacs. The keymap is extremely subtle, and without a solid grasp of theoretical physics most of the functionality will go over a typical user's head. There's also Stallman's nihilistic outlook, which is deftly woven into his characterisation - his personal philosophy draws heavily from the United States Declaration of Independence, for instance. The fans understand this stuff; they have the intellectual capacity to truly appreciate the depths of this functionality, to realize that they're not just useful- they say something deep about LIFE. As a consequence people who dislike Emacs truly ARE idiots- of course they wouldn't appreciate, for instance, the ideology in Stallman's existencial catchphrase "I eat shit off my feet," which itself is a cryptic reference to Raymond's epic The Cathedral and the Bazaar. I'm smirking right now just imagining one of those addlepated simpletons scratching their heads in confusion as Guy L. Steele's genius unfolds itself on their computer screens. What fools... how I pity them. And yes by the way, I DO have a Saint IGNUcius tattoo. And no, you cannot see it. It's for the ladies' eyes only- And even they have to demonstrate that they're within 5 IQ points of my own (preferably lower) beforehand.<|eor|><|sor|>i must have a super low iq, since the only thing i understood there was " I eat shit off my feet "<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
25
programmingcirclejerk
System0verlord
ffe6sh9
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|sor|>Why is this fat smelly guy with a beard looking at me funny when I'm clicking around with my mouse in my big fat IDE?<|eor|><|sor|>I use both emacs and an IDE is that why I'm a fat badly shaven guy who smells good ? Like an in between<|eor|><|sor|>Youre fat, poorly shaven, and only apply deodorant to a single armpit.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
23
programmingcirclejerk
wheypoint
ffel5fo
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>The key point here is our programmers are Googlers, theyre not researchers. Theyre typically, fairly young, fresh out of school, probably learned using a mouse. Theyre not capable of understanding a brilliant keyboard but we want to use them to build good software. So, the input device that we give them has to be easy for them to understand and easy to adopt<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
19
programmingcirclejerk
Waghlon
ffd3wpf
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|sor|>help how do i exit this threads gesgeshgx<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
14
programmingcirclejerk
SabrinaSorceress
ffdqb6o
<|sols|><|sot|>I'm often ashamed looking at my colleagues trying to find some file with a mouse in their big fat IDEs.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22130231<|eol|><|sor|>List of acceptable Emacs input methods: * 3D SpaceMouse * Doug Englebart's original chorded keyboard * Dual arcade joysticks * Novation Launchpad * Voice recognition (if the control characters have cool names like scratch and slap) * EEG (implanted only, no wearable posers) * Minority Report (for impressing the babes/president) * Sign language maybe? I read a book once where spies talked in sign language and that was pretty cool * Vive controller (for private time)<|eor|><|sor|>You forgot the steel battallion controller, perfect for chorded inputs<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
11
programmingcirclejerk
cmov
e93v8e
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
148
programmingcirclejerk
tomwhoiscontrary
faghmzu
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|sor|>> based on procedural model the generic is better. But Go is one third each procedural, concurrent and functional. Generics are a procedural programming concept pinned tightly to compilation. Functional and concurrent programming approaches this differently<|eor|><|sor|>Imagine if someone could somehow figure out how to bring generics to functional programming! Alas, an impossible dream.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
93
programmingcirclejerk
univalence
fagdkrp
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|sor|>> based on procedural model the generic is better. But Go is one third each procedural, concurrent and functional. Generics are a procedural programming concept pinned tightly to compilation. Functional and concurrent programming approaches this differently<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
83
programmingcirclejerk
cmov
fagd3jw
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|soopr|>> Generics are an abstraction that does not improve performance or reduce development costs.<|eoopr|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
64
programmingcirclejerk
silentconfessor
fagh6xa
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|sor|>> based on procedural model the generic is better. But Go is one third each procedural, concurrent and functional. Generics are a procedural programming concept pinned tightly to compilation. Functional and concurrent programming approaches this differently<|eor|><|sor|>/uj Are gophers really this delusional?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
62
programmingcirclejerk
RaspberryPie-
faggvw7
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|sor|>> Would you demolish a house to fix one room? Because using unrelated metaphors means you win the internet.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
60
programmingcirclejerk
univalence
fagsi97
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|sor|>> based on procedural model the generic is better. But Go is one third each procedural, concurrent and functional. Generics are a procedural programming concept pinned tightly to compilation. Functional and concurrent programming approaches this differently<|eor|><|sor|>/uj Are gophers really this delusional?<|eor|><|sor|>/uj seriously where is the functional paradigm in go? It looks 110% imperative to me<|eor|><|sor|>Go has first class functions. It's impossible to leverage them, because you need generics to do that. But they're there.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
56
programmingcirclejerk
univalence
faghueu
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|sor|>> based on procedural model the generic is better. But Go is one third each procedural, concurrent and functional. Generics are a procedural programming concept pinned tightly to compilation. Functional and concurrent programming approaches this differently<|eor|><|sor|>Imagine if someone could somehow figure out how to bring generics to functional programming! Alas, an impossible dream.<|eor|><|sor|>I have a thought about how to do this. It's going to revolutionize programming. Since generics will allow metaprogramming, I'm thinking of calling the language "MetaLanguage". Stay tuned for a github repo<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
55
programmingcirclejerk
logicchains
fagwc8z
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|sor|>> based on procedural model the generic is better. But Go is one third each procedural, concurrent and functional. Generics are a procedural programming concept pinned tightly to compilation. Functional and concurrent programming approaches this differently<|eor|><|sor|>/uj Are gophers really this delusional?<|eor|><|sor|>/uj seriously where is the functional paradigm in go? It looks 110% imperative to me<|eor|><|sor|>Go has first class functions. It's impossible to leverage them, because you need generics to do that. But they're there.<|eor|><|sor|>`func map(fn: interface{}, xs: []interface{}) -> []interface{}` would like a word with you.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
54
programmingcirclejerk
tetroxid
fagnrwn
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|sor|>> based on procedural model the generic is better. But Go is one third each procedural, concurrent and functional. Generics are a procedural programming concept pinned tightly to compilation. Functional and concurrent programming approaches this differently<|eor|><|sor|>/uj Are gophers really this delusional?<|eor|><|sor|>/uj seriously where is the functional paradigm in go? It looks 110% imperative to me<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
49
programmingcirclejerk
affectation_man
fagj1o6
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|sor|>Only a few *days* huh. So this is the power of 10x pragmatism.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
30
programmingcirclejerk
WasabiofIP
fagzn8a
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|sor|>Only a few *days* huh. So this is the power of 10x pragmatism.<|eor|><|sor|>Imagine this guy reporting at standup, for most of a week, that he's find-and-replacing `int32` to `uint32`<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
29
programmingcirclejerk
tango-tiger
fagphuj
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|sor|>I don't really see why Go exists if it cannot make node faster (that's why you need "system languages"), but it's great to see its community maintain the great spirit of innovation from Bell Labs. It has a way of attracting the best thinkers of our generation and keep them busy recreating the simpler time of the 70s so the Commander can feel safe again. Taking care of old people as they deteriorate physically and mentally is a noble task, gophers should feel proud as they wipe geriatric poop while listening to the same anecdote about BCPL for the 95th time.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
27
programmingcirclejerk
cmov
fagd418
<|sols|><|sot|>Implementing generics will slow down compilation by probably a factor of ten or more. I could instead manually search and replace one package to change its payload type in less than a few days. Over the lifespan of the project that is time I will lose to the compiler.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e8zmzz/whats_with_the_hate_for_generics/fafrtcz/<|eol|><|soopr|>> So can you explain why you come to a community of programmers with early 70s, maybe 60s ideas that only run one thread instead of something relevant?<|eoopr|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
26