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programmingcirclejerk
hernytan
fwc7317
<|sols|><|sot|>To mitigate [slow compile times], you can download all crates in advance to cache them locally. ... The archive size is surprisingly reasonable, with roughly 50GB of required disk space.<|eot|><|sol|>https://endler.dev/2020/rust-compile-times/<|eol|><|sor|>Imagine compiling your project in a fucking ramdisk so you get compiles done by the end of the week This meme was brought to you by the Ocaml gang Edit: meant to drop the f bomb on the ramdisk part.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
67
programmingcirclejerk
jaccarmac
fwc5t19
<|sols|><|sot|>To mitigate [slow compile times], you can download all crates in advance to cache them locally. ... The archive size is surprisingly reasonable, with roughly 50GB of required disk space.<|eot|><|sol|>https://endler.dev/2020/rust-compile-times/<|eol|><|sor|>That's a great tip for JavaScript too! Can't wait to see `npm isntall all-scriptures`<|eor|><|soopr|>Careful! For the webshit version of this hack (TM), ensure that your file system has enough inodes to index the expansive NPM standard library. Made with <|eoopr|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
52
programmingcirclejerk
Karyo_Ten
fwc91iq
<|sols|><|sot|>To mitigate [slow compile times], you can download all crates in advance to cache them locally. ... The archive size is surprisingly reasonable, with roughly 50GB of required disk space.<|eot|><|sol|>https://endler.dev/2020/rust-compile-times/<|eol|><|sor|>> For example, if you compare it with Go, their compiler is doing a lot less work in general. It lacks support for generics and macros. But D and Nim are fearlessly faster and supports generics and macros. > Comparing across toolchains makes little sense here, and compile times are mostly fine for smaller projects, so if your project builds fast enough, your job here is done. If you're only looking to write println! ("Hello World"), you can stop reading. It's lifetime has been proven data race free after 5 seconds of morality checks. > Macros,..., Type checking,... Monomorphization,... lol no interfaces > LLVM is notorious for being slow. (link to blog post from May 10) The road to fame in the crab land is only 1 month. In the mean time in C land, Clang took 10 years to be notorious at being faster than GCC and having better error messages. > On top of that, Rust tracks compile regressions on a website dedicated to performance. sudo: Crabs running sideway will be flagged and the incident will be reported > Rumor has it that there's still a lot of low-hanging fruit. Wine is not an emulator and not a language either. Rumor has it that it's an oxidized fruit. > Overall, the Rust compiler is legitimately doing a great job. "When you reject all programs you don't have much of a job to do" whispers some Jabbascripter in the background. > But all hope is not lost! Have faith in your savior young ones, the crab will not let your references go to waste. Analyzing then spreading the remaining glorious deeds is left as an exercice to the devotees of the Church of the Crab. My fingers ache, I must have missed a lifetime annotation.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
42
programmingcirclejerk
PrimozDelux
fwckwn7
<|sols|><|sot|>To mitigate [slow compile times], you can download all crates in advance to cache them locally. ... The archive size is surprisingly reasonable, with roughly 50GB of required disk space.<|eot|><|sol|>https://endler.dev/2020/rust-compile-times/<|eol|><|sor|>That's a great tip for JavaScript too! Can't wait to see `npm isntall all-scriptures`<|eor|><|sor|>Also known as react app<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
24
programmingcirclejerk
railwayrookie
fwccnqr
<|sols|><|sot|>To mitigate [slow compile times], you can download all crates in advance to cache them locally. ... The archive size is surprisingly reasonable, with roughly 50GB of required disk space.<|eot|><|sol|>https://endler.dev/2020/rust-compile-times/<|eol|><|sor|>That's a great tip for JavaScript too! Can't wait to see `npm isntall all-scriptures`<|eor|><|soopr|>Careful! For the webshit version of this hack (TM), ensure that your file system has enough inodes to index the expansive NPM standard library. Made with <|eoopr|><|sor|>lol no dynamic inode allocation do you even xfs?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
14
programmingcirclejerk
voidvector
fwclyhf
<|sols|><|sot|>To mitigate [slow compile times], you can download all crates in advance to cache them locally. ... The archive size is surprisingly reasonable, with roughly 50GB of required disk space.<|eot|><|sol|>https://endler.dev/2020/rust-compile-times/<|eol|><|sor|>That's a great tip for JavaScript too! Can't wait to see `npm isntall all-scriptures`<|eor|><|sor|>When your parents ask you to download the Internet for them, you know how now.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
13
programmingcirclejerk
VeganVagiVore
fwd783i
<|sols|><|sot|>To mitigate [slow compile times], you can download all crates in advance to cache them locally. ... The archive size is surprisingly reasonable, with roughly 50GB of required disk space.<|eot|><|sol|>https://endler.dev/2020/rust-compile-times/<|eol|><|sor|>This is the #1 reason why I wont try out a cool project if its written in Rust, JavaScript or Go. I invariably have to download hundreds of megabytes of bloat before I can even run the binary or compile the project.<|eor|><|sor|>It's nice to see a simple project written in C98 where I can just clone the Git repo, run autoconf for 10 minutes to figure out what a pointer is, and then it crashes because it's missing some eldritch library from the Chromium tree.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
12
programmingcirclejerk
0x564A00
fwcvz4h
<|sols|><|sot|>To mitigate [slow compile times], you can download all crates in advance to cache them locally. ... The archive size is surprisingly reasonable, with roughly 50GB of required disk space.<|eot|><|sol|>https://endler.dev/2020/rust-compile-times/<|eol|><|sor|>I completely agree with everything I read here! And because of webshits only overriding text colour, I don't have to read anything because [I can't](https://i.imgur.com/kp6MVcj.png)!<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
8
programmingcirclejerk
HAXUS_THE_REDDITOR
eyeqeb
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
145
programmingcirclejerk
Beheddard
fggrr83
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>Electron/USB, or as I've recently taken to calling it Electron plus USB is a very interesting problem domain.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
136
programmingcirclejerk
duckbill_principate
fgh5896
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>Hardware developers rise up! My specialty is CSS/SCSI btw<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
111
programmingcirclejerk
Xoepe
fgh4bnb
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>/uj I don't care about this being here, but making an electron app that interfaces with USB is barely hardware<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
69
programmingcirclejerk
ProfessorSexyTime
fghdlzu
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>> A naive developer will read about WebUSB and think, "oh, Electron is Chrome, so this must be a good solution!" but remember that Electron apps consist of one node process (main) and multiple chrome processes (renderers, aka, BrowserWindow objects). Exactly what I think of for what I need for interacting with USBs; 1 singular Node process and `BrowserWindow` objects.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
68
programmingcirclejerk
dragonwithagirltatoo
fgh5d7t
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>/uj I don't care about this being here, but making an electron app that interfaces with USB is barely hardware<|eor|><|sor|>I'm a hardware focused developer. My code runs on the jvm and that shit runs on hardware yo.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
65
programmingcirclejerk
duckbill_principate
fghwfxg
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>Electron/USB, or as I've recently taken to calling it Electron plus USB is a very interesting problem domain.<|eor|><|sor|>Linux or as I like to call it systemd + electron<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
40
programmingcirclejerk
Waghlon
fggssg7
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>Electron/USB, or as I've recently taken to calling it Electron plus USB is a very interesting problem domain.<|eor|><|sor|>It's also why my parents got divorced.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
40
programmingcirclejerk
republitard_2
fgh92fu
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>/uj I don't care about this being here, but making an electron app that interfaces with USB is barely hardware<|eor|><|sor|>I'm a hardware focused developer. My code runs on the jvm and that shit runs on hardware yo.<|eor|><|sor|>As a professional systems programmer, I only use Node, because nothing else is closer to the metal.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
38
programmingcirclejerk
xmcqdpt2
fghm1vs
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>Hardware developers rise up! My specialty is CSS/SCSI btw<|eor|><|sor|>Scientists too! I do excel / bit banging parallel ports<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
36
programmingcirclejerk
stone_henge
fghyzdm
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>I'm more of a Haskell/SCART person myself > You should absolutely not do this - don't do anything in the main process at all; blocking it even a little bit makes your entire app janky and hang'y. dude make sure you attribute your quote to the electron reference manual<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
29
programmingcirclejerk
F54280
fgi0qwo
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>Hardware developers rise up! My specialty is CSS/SCSI btw<|eor|><|sor|>node/FPGA developer here! I too have developed dozens of incredibly difficult problems at Starbucks over the last few years. Super fun, indeed. Npm install Xilinx, baby!<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
23
programmingcirclejerk
loics2
fghxddj
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>/uj I don't care about this being here, but making an electron app that interfaces with USB is barely hardware<|eor|><|sor|>I'm a hardware focused developer. My code runs on the jvm and that shit runs on hardware yo.<|eor|><|sor|>As a professional systems programmer, I only use Node, because nothing else is closer to the metal.<|eor|><|sor|>M.E.T.A.L., amirite<|eor|><|sor|>MongoDB + express + typescript + angular + libre office?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
20
programmingcirclejerk
v64
fghek9n
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>/uj I don't care about this being here, but making an electron app that interfaces with USB is barely hardware<|eor|><|sor|>I'm a hardware focused developer. My code runs on the jvm and that shit runs on hardware yo.<|eor|><|sor|>As a professional systems programmer, I only use Node, because nothing else is closer to the metal.<|eor|><|sor|>nothing is closer to metal than rust<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
19
programmingcirclejerk
mdmd136
fghtef3
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>Electron/USB, or as I've recently taken to calling it Electron plus USB is a very interesting problem domain.<|eor|><|sor|>It's also why my parents got divorced.<|eor|><|sor|>THIS. My parents got divorced because my mom uses tabs instead of spaces and my dad won in settlers of catan one time.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
18
programmingcirclejerk
--TYGER--
fgi1mki
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>A friend from work was complaining about the sort of calls he gets with job offers: Windows tech support and the like. His CV says he's a Systems Engineer, he writes firmware in C, works with electronic equipment etc. That's when I let him know that he's getting these garbage offers because Microsoft has a qualification called Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer (MCSE)...<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
17
programmingcirclejerk
F54280
fgi2rqb
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>Hardware developers rise up! My specialty is CSS/SCSI btw<|eor|><|sor|>Scientists too! I do excel / bit banging parallel ports<|eor|><|sor|>> I do excel / bit banging parallel ports Interesting ! How does that compare to a simple DMA from powerpoint?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
17
programmingcirclejerk
BillyIII
fgi5nbw
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>Hardware<|eor|><|sor|>RAM is hardware.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
14
programmingcirclejerk
ws-ilazki
fghy885
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>/uj I don't care about this being here, but making an electron app that interfaces with USB is barely hardware<|eor|><|sor|>I'm a hardware focused developer. My code runs on the jvm and that shit runs on hardware yo.<|eor|><|sor|>I would link the relevant xkcd, but I value my dignity.<|eor|><|sor|>I'm not familiar with it actually what is it called?<|eor|><|sor|>"Golden Hammer"<|eor|><|sor|>> Golden Hammer The fact that you know the name of the relevant xkcd at all shows you have no dignity to value.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
13
programmingcirclejerk
piginpoop
fgi4j9g
<|sols|><|sot|>Ten years ago I would never have identified as a hardware-focused software developer. Now it's become part of my professional identity. My speciality is Electron/USB. I've solved dozens of incredibly difficult problems over the last few years. Super fun.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22229456<|eol|><|sor|>Hardware<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
12
programmingcirclejerk
cmov
e6etlr
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
141
programmingcirclejerk
FLUFL
f9pk9c1
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|soopr|>> I've noticed advanced programmers (by watching on e.g. twitch) don't program with auto complete. They write big chunks of code first and then rely on compiler error messages to tell them if they made typos or mistakes.<|eoopr|><|sor|>> I've noticed advanced programmers (by watching on e.g. twitch) Lol 10xrs have all moved to Mixer by Microsoft.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
116
programmingcirclejerk
CarnivorousJazz
f9pk8zt
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|sor|>/uj I can't jerk to this. Autocompleting editors are a crutch, that lead to Expert Beginners.<|eor|><|sor|>>I can't jerk to this. Autocompleting editors are a crutch, that lead to Expert Beginners. As always, real jerk is in the comments<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
103
programmingcirclejerk
cmov
f9piirv
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|soopr|>> I've noticed advanced programmers (by watching on e.g. twitch) don't program with auto complete. They write big chunks of code first and then rely on compiler error messages to tell them if they made typos or mistakes.<|eoopr|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
99
programmingcirclejerk
GinaCaralho
f9pnke8
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|soopr|>> I've noticed advanced programmers (by watching on e.g. twitch) don't program with auto complete. They write big chunks of code first and then rely on compiler error messages to tell them if they made typos or mistakes.<|eoopr|><|sor|>> I've noticed advanced programmers (by watching on e.g. twitch) Lol 10xrs have all moved to Mixer by Microsoft.<|eor|><|sor|>I stream my Rust sessions on PornHub. Their platform is much more moral than Twitch and YouTube<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
94
programmingcirclejerk
SumTingWong59
f9pwrgk
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|sor|>/uj I can't jerk to this. Autocompleting editors are a crutch, that lead to Expert Beginners.<|eor|><|sor|>>I can't jerk to this. Autocompleting editors are a crutch, that lead to Expert Beginners. As always, real jerk is in the comments<|eor|><|sor|>You have a lot to learn, young Padwan.<|eor|><|sor|>Autocomplete would have spelled Padawan correctly for you<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
69
programmingcirclejerk
clubby789
f9pn4qd
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|soopr|>> I've noticed advanced programmers (by watching on e.g. twitch) don't program with auto complete. They write big chunks of code first and then rely on compiler error messages to tell them if they made typos or mistakes.<|eoopr|><|sor|>*Real* programmers deploy their code to production and debug based on users complaining<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
68
programmingcirclejerk
Schmittfried
f9pka1c
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|sor|>/uj I can't jerk to this. Autocompleting editors are a crutch, that lead to Expert Beginners.<|eor|><|sor|>Youre supposed to not be brain dead in your unjerks.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
62
programmingcirclejerk
trollman_falcon
f9pk7w9
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|sor|>/uj Our computer labs computers are dogshit and it takes visual studio longer to load the autocompletions that it does to just type it so if you wait for the autocompletions it actually does hinder your speed But that is the schools fault for not getting new computers since 04. Any other time with a functional autocompletion and Ill take that over manual tping any day<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
53
programmingcirclejerk
ChaosRefined
f9pxk6c
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|sor|>/uj I can't jerk to this. Autocompleting editors are a crutch, that lead to Expert Beginners.<|eor|><|sor|>>I can't jerk to this. Autocompleting editors are a crutch, that lead to Expert Beginners. As always, real jerk is in the comments<|eor|><|sor|>You have a lot to learn, young Padwan.<|eor|><|sor|>Autocomplete would have spelled Padawan correctly for you<|eor|><|sor|>Yet you caught the meaning.<|eor|><|sor|>the compiler won't next time you miss it<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
52
programmingcirclejerk
VitulusAureus
f9pmx7p
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|sor|>> The problem is not Go, the problem is VSCode and the LSP. Thanks, I'll keep that in mind next time I go-jerk.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
48
programmingcirclejerk
VeganVagiVore
f9pytd8
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|sor|>/uj Our computer labs computers are dogshit and it takes visual studio longer to load the autocompletions that it does to just type it so if you wait for the autocompletions it actually does hinder your speed But that is the schools fault for not getting new computers since 04. Any other time with a functional autocompletion and Ill take that over manual tping any day<|eor|><|sor|>/uj This is why I like to use Kate or some text editor that just has a half-assed autocomplete based on detecting words within the open files. It's a lot faster and 90% as good, considering how often proper autocomplete fails either because I'm trying to find the String methods in the Strjng class, or because it just shit itself.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
26
programmingcirclejerk
VitulusAureus
f9pmy6h
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|sor|>> The problem is not Go, the problem is VSCode and the LSP. Thanks, I'll keep that in mind next time I go-jerk.<|eor|><|sor|>VSCode BAD<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
24
programmingcirclejerk
vonmoltke2
f9q0kxw
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|soopr|>> I've noticed advanced programmers (by watching on e.g. twitch) don't program with auto complete. They write big chunks of code first and then rely on compiler error messages to tell them if they made typos or mistakes.<|eoopr|><|sor|>> I've noticed advanced programmers (by watching on e.g. twitch) Lol 10xrs have all moved to Mixer by Microsoft.<|eor|><|sor|>I stream my Rust sessions on PornHub. Their platform is much more moral than Twitch and YouTube<|eor|><|sor|>Also, all the 69 videos demonstrate their commitment to fearless concurrency.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
22
programmingcirclejerk
ProfessorSexyTime
f9qe4bf
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|soopr|>> I've noticed advanced programmers (by watching on e.g. twitch) don't program with auto complete. They write big chunks of code first and then rely on compiler error messages to tell them if they made typos or mistakes.<|eoopr|><|sor|>> I've noticed advanced programmers (by watching on e.g. twitch) Lol 10xrs have all moved to Mixer by Microsoft.<|eor|><|sor|>I stream my Rust sessions on PornHub. Their platform is much more moral than Twitch and YouTube<|eor|><|sor|>> PornHub. Their platform is much more moral than Twitch and YouTube This but unironically<|eor|><|sor|>\> tfw the platform where people *actually* get fucked in the ass get better treatment than the "family-friendlier" platforms<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
21
programmingcirclejerk
15rthughes
f9pxc2q
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|sor|>/uj I can't jerk to this. Autocompleting editors are a crutch, that lead to Expert Beginners.<|eor|><|sor|>Lol that you even use a text editor, real 10xers use punch cards for *ultimate* control of CPU instructions.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
19
programmingcirclejerk
ProfessorSexyTime
f9qeg8x
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|sor|>/uj Our computer labs computers are dogshit and it takes visual studio longer to load the autocompletions that it does to just type it so if you wait for the autocompletions it actually does hinder your speed But that is the schools fault for not getting new computers since 04. Any other time with a functional autocompletion and Ill take that over manual tping any day<|eor|><|sor|>/uj This is why I like to use Kate or some text editor that just has a half-assed autocomplete based on detecting words within the open files. It's a lot faster and 90% as good, considering how often proper autocomplete fails either because I'm trying to find the String methods in the Strjng class, or because it just shit itself.<|eor|><|sor|>Has thou not heard the good word of Emacs, my child?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
19
programmingcirclejerk
OctagonClock
f9pl36t
<|sols|><|sot|>Programming with autocompletion hinders your speed. It's like using a bike with training wheels. It feels like you're being 'helped' but you're not.<|eot|><|sol|>https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/e63m1y/go_experience_keeps_deteriorating_while_using_go/f9oddwe/<|eol|><|sor|>/uj Our computer labs computers are dogshit and it takes visual studio longer to load the autocompletions that it does to just type it so if you wait for the autocompletions it actually does hinder your speed But that is the schools fault for not getting new computers since 04. Any other time with a functional autocompletion and Ill take that over manual tping any day<|eor|><|sor|>Thanks for the info<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
18
programmingcirclejerk
stingraycharles
bu2shc
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
142
programmingcirclejerk
fp_weenie
ep6a2jw
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|sor|>such innovators in the field of bikeshedding... what a great community!<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
123
programmingcirclejerk
spookthesunset
ep6dlwj
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|sor|>Rusts: unsafe impl<'a, T: 'a> UnsafeFutureObj<'a, T> for Pin<Box<dyn Future<Output = T> + Send + 'a>> { } also Rusts: "tHE lAcK Of parEnthEseS IS cONFUSinG"<|eor|><|sor|>Security consultant here. After working in shops that use other languages, I have observed that Rusts carefully designed syntax makes it the most secure language in the market. You can tell each feature of the language was meticulously crafted by artisan language designers who strove for a moral way to create software.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
110
programmingcirclejerk
wafflePower1
ep6p2iv
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|sor|>This gotta be sarcasm - so much bikeshedding over... async/await... when C# and JS just fucking did it... Fucking Rust.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
53
programmingcirclejerk
fp_weenie
ep6b9qn
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|sor|>such innovators in the field of bikeshedding... what a great community!<|eor|><|sor|>How innovative! How innovative!<|eor|><|sor|>hard to imagine a community as great as this one... my penis is throbbing like an oral-b electric toothbrush.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
50
programmingcirclejerk
ImAStupidFace
ep82fm2
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|sor|>Rusts: unsafe impl<'a, T: 'a> UnsafeFutureObj<'a, T> for Pin<Box<dyn Future<Output = T> + Send + 'a>> { } also Rusts: "tHE lAcK Of parEnthEseS IS cONFUSinG"<|eor|><|sor|>Security consultant here. After working in shops that use other languages, I have observed that Rusts carefully designed syntax makes it the most secure language in the market. You can tell each feature of the language was meticulously crafted by artisan language designers who strove for a moral way to create software.<|eor|><|sor|>/r/pcj shit poster here. After working in shops that use other languages, I have observed that Rusts terrible syntax makes it the most obscure and gatekeeping language in the market. You can tell each feature of the language was half-assed crafted by people who had no idea of what they were creating to try to make a "safe" competitor to C++.<|eor|><|sor|>Copypasta connoisseur here. After shitposting in other formats, I have observed that this copypasta's carefully designed phrasing makes it the dankest one on the market. You can tell each sentence of the copypasta was meticulously crafted by artisan shitposters who strove for a moral way to get fake internet points. How exciting, how exciting!<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
44
programmingcirclejerk
tpgreyknight
ep6z3z9
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|sor|>I wonder if they went with one of the sensible approaches? > In brief, we decided to go forward with the preliminary proposal I outlined earlier: a postfix dot syntax, `future.await`. Welp.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
42
programmingcirclejerk
pcjftw
ep6yg4i
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|sor|>such innovators in the field of bikeshedding... what a great community!<|eor|><|sor|>How innovative! How innovative!<|eor|><|sor|>hard to imagine a community as great as this one... my penis is throbbing like an oral-b electric toothbrush.<|eor|><|sor|>I believe one calls that an Oral-D<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
31
programmingcirclejerk
skulgnome
ep6nwvw
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|sor|>Experiments in radical democracy.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
26
programmingcirclejerk
muntoo
ep89cxz
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|sor|>Async await async await async await async await In the jungle, the mighty jungle<|eor|><|sor|>*The thread sleeps tonight*<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
26
programmingcirclejerk
NAN001
ep6oa5u
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|sor|>This post should become grayed out like the child comment that points out the law of triviality.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
20
programmingcirclejerk
voidvector
ep7inh2
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|sor|>I wonder if they went with one of the sensible approaches? > In brief, we decided to go forward with the preliminary proposal I outlined earlier: a postfix dot syntax, `future.await`. Welp.<|eor|><|sor|>It is a zero-cost abstraction over the prefix keyword syntax<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
19
programmingcirclejerk
skulgnome
ep7ghlj
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|sor|>Experiments in radical democracy.<|eor|><|sor|>Democracy was a mistake. Ruthless autocratic rule of the technocratic and merit-based AI when?<|eor|><|sor|>When I implement one, and no sooner.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
15
programmingcirclejerk
senntenial
ep8imm3
<|sols|><|sot|>Rust chooses syntax for async/await: This was the most impressive work in open source decision-making that I have ever followed. People have contributed *thousands* of comments discussing this for over a year!<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20031470<|eol|><|sor|>Rusts: unsafe impl<'a, T: 'a> UnsafeFutureObj<'a, T> for Pin<Box<dyn Future<Output = T> + Send + 'a>> { } also Rusts: "tHE lAcK Of parEnthEseS IS cONFUSinG"<|eor|><|sor|>consistency != verbosity != clarity<|eor|><|sor|>/uj You could only possibly be confused by it if you didn't know it was reserved syntax at all or anything about how it worked, which makes it about as likely to confuse someone as `vec!` or anything else. Source: have Paskalled professionally for decades, Paskal being a language where if a function or procedure takes zero arguments, parentheses are always entirely optional when calling it. Have so far not died from confusion. /j<|eor|><|sor|>this is all fair and true and you're making sense but I have to disagree since rust has no problems at all ever<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
15
programmingcirclejerk
tuckmuck203
aaelst
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
140
programmingcirclejerk
AprilSpektra
ecrdwcp
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>weird flex but ok<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
83
programmingcirclejerk
thephotoman
ecre6by
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>Don't get me wrong, aliases are great. But if you're using that many of them, you might consider just changing your $PATH. <|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
39
programmingcirclejerk
tuckmuck203
ecrfg3e
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>Don't get me wrong, aliases are great. But if you're using that many of them, you might consider just changing your $PATH. <|eor|><|soopr|>Nah man, aliases are the future. Once NPM hits peak velocity, all we need are aliases for npm commands. Why type npm install left-pad when you can type just left-pad? From here you can just make an alias for an awk and sed command chain, and create an entire website with just aliases <|eoopr|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
32
programmingcirclejerk
acc_test
ecrga4s
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>That's unnecessary. Internet implies `dotfiles` access. Lack of a `dotfiles` repo should be an automatic disqualifier. SSH access is what we should be fighting for.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
25
programmingcirclejerk
ExBigBoss
ecs6yir
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>/uj I work with a guy who doesn't use _any_ auto-completion because he claims it makes him dependent on tools that wouldn't exist when SSH'ing into a remote server to do dev during a time of crisis. <|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
24
programmingcirclejerk
Jonno_FTW
ecsxviy
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>/uj I work with a guy who doesn't use _any_ auto-completion because he claims it makes him dependent on tools that wouldn't exist when SSH'ing into a remote server to do dev during a time of crisis. <|eor|><|sor|>What's the meaning of /uj? Seen it twice in this thread. Never before. Edit: unjerk. I'm smart.<|eor|><|sor|>It's an alias<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
24
programmingcirclejerk
ninjaaron
ecrqxf3
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>That's unnecessary. Internet implies `dotfiles` access. Lack of a `dotfiles` repo should be an automatic disqualifier. SSH access is what we should be fighting for.<|eor|><|sor|>Joking aside, I was asked by Apple after a phone screen if I had any dotfiles I wanted to share.<|eor|><|sor|>I'm (obviously) part of the dotfiles-on-github elite (probably in the top 100)... but why are employers asking about this?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
22
programmingcirclejerk
ProfessorSexyTime
ecrjh5r
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>Get on my level. I even use my aliases outside the shell: if [[ ! ${PATH} =~ 'TABD' ]]; then if [[ -z $TABD ]] ; then export TABD=`mktemp -d /tmp/TABD.XXXX` alias | while read l;do name="$(expr "$l" : '\([^=]*\)=.*')" if [[ -n $name ]]; then comm="$(expr "$l" : '[^=]*=\(.*\)$')" if ([[ ${comm:0:1} == "'" ]] || [[ ${comm:0:1} == '"' ]]); then comm="${comm:1:-1}" fi echo "${comm}" '"$@"' > "${TABD}/${name}" fi done chmod +x ${TABD}/* fi PATH+=":${TABD}" export PATH fi Apologies for the lack of a paskal version.<|eor|><|sor|>Why do this to yourself?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
21
programmingcirclejerk
manafount
ecrj0lw
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>That's unnecessary. Internet implies `dotfiles` access. Lack of a `dotfiles` repo should be an automatic disqualifier. SSH access is what we should be fighting for.<|eor|><|sor|>Joking aside, I was asked by Apple after a phone screen if I had any dotfiles I wanted to share.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
19
programmingcirclejerk
verbify
ecrl3g4
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>Don't get me wrong, aliases are great. But if you're using that many of them, you might consider just changing your $PATH. <|eor|><|soopr|>Nah man, aliases are the future. Once NPM hits peak velocity, all we need are aliases for npm commands. Why type npm install left-pad when you can type just left-pad? From here you can just make an alias for an awk and sed command chain, and create an entire website with just aliases <|eoopr|><|sor|>>just make an alias for an awk and sed command chain Pfft, I don't get this obsession with owning your own command chain. Just use a turnkey aaass (Alias-As-A-Service-Solution).<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
19
programmingcirclejerk
acc_test
ecrfufb
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>Get on my level. I even use my aliases outside the shell: if [[ ! ${PATH} =~ 'TABD' ]]; then if [[ -z $TABD ]] ; then export TABD=`mktemp -d /tmp/TABD.XXXX` alias | while read l;do name="$(expr "$l" : '\([^=]*\)=.*')" if [[ -n $name ]]; then comm="$(expr "$l" : '[^=]*=\(.*\)$')" if ([[ ${comm:0:1} == "'" ]] || [[ ${comm:0:1} == '"' ]]); then comm="${comm:1:-1}" fi echo "${comm}" '"$@"' > "${TABD}/${name}" fi done chmod +x ${TABD}/* fi PATH+=":${TABD}" export PATH fi Apologies for the lack of a paskal version.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
18
programmingcirclejerk
err_pell
ecsiq5n
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>That's unnecessary. Internet implies `dotfiles` access. Lack of a `dotfiles` repo should be an automatic disqualifier. SSH access is what we should be fighting for.<|eor|><|sor|>Joking aside, I was asked by Apple after a phone screen if I had any dotfiles I wanted to share.<|eor|><|sor|>What is dotfile :S<|eor|><|sor|>Dotfiles are config files for assorted programs like vim, emacs, bash, and others. They're called "dotfiles" because they all start with a dot: ".emacs", ".vimrc", ".bash_profile", etc. Usually stored in ~/.<|eor|><|sor|>[removed]<|eor|><|sor|>There are files on Windows?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
15
programmingcirclejerk
tuckmuck203
ecrf661
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>What's with the quotation marks?<|eor|><|soopr|>I'm super high and was too stupid to realize the quotation marks should have obviously been implicit <|eoopr|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
12
programmingcirclejerk
lol_no_monads
ecrte8t
<|sols|><|sot|>"I don't need auto complete because I'm probably in the top 100 of alias users in the world"<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aabai1/fish_shell_30/ecra4sk<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>That's unnecessary. Internet implies `dotfiles` access. Lack of a `dotfiles` repo should be an automatic disqualifier. SSH access is what we should be fighting for.<|eor|><|sor|>Joking aside, I was asked by Apple after a phone screen if I had any dotfiles I wanted to share.<|eor|><|sor|>Was the interviewer impressed by your 10x productivity?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
10
programmingcirclejerk
lol-no-monads
9xunl3
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
141
programmingcirclejerk
wafflePower1
e9vf08b
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>> and respects you sure<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
123
programmingcirclejerk
ClownPFart
e9vkh3l
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>How to know if someone uses rust? Don't worry, they'll tell you<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
62
programmingcirclejerk
n3f4s
e9vcn2b
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>Go vegan <|eor|><|sor|>\*Nod while eating a sausage\*<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
62
programmingcirclejerk
cmov
e9w2fgy
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>How to know if someone uses rust? Don't worry, they'll tell you<|eor|><|sor|>I use Rust btw. Also Arch.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
31
programmingcirclejerk
wafflePower1
e9vfg0o
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>> and respects you sure<|eor|><|sor|>[Why I respect vegans](https://www.reddit.com/r/vegan/comments/2bqjfh/why_i_respect_vegans/)<|eor|><|sor|>> sure<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
30
programmingcirclejerk
0xd05
e9vdrwe
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>Go vegan <|eor|><|sor|>Go Rust<|eor|><|sor|>Go Go<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
26
programmingcirclejerk
PM_ME_A_SHOWER_BEER
e9vfbhz
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>I'm vegetarian, does that make me a C++ shyster? <|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
22
programmingcirclejerk
logicchains
e9vy0eq
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>B12 deficient is actually a quite compelling explanation for the Rustacean behavior. <|eor|><|sor|>B was the original language that inspired C. Incrementing by 12: B->B++->C->C89->C99->C11->C17->C++2001->C++11->C++14->C++17->C++20, so B12 deficiency is C++20 deficiency, and the story checks out! <|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
22
programmingcirclejerk
fijt
e9vfy72
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>>But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Very good. Now, please shut up!<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
21
programmingcirclejerk
blahbah
e9ve13j
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>Go vegan <|eor|><|sor|>Go Rust<|eor|><|sor|>Go Go<|eor|><|sor|>Gadget<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
21
programmingcirclejerk
pcjftw
e9w9rz2
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>"I love Haskal. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating burritos."<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
16
programmingcirclejerk
rubdos
e9wo75v
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>How to know if someone uses rust? Don't worry, they'll tell you<|eor|><|sor|>I use Rust btw. Also Arch.<|eor|><|sor|>This is so much more true for me than the "btw I use Arch" meme. Although I also use both.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
16
programmingcirclejerk
n3f4s
e9vhg83
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>Go vegan <|eor|><|sor|>\*Nod while eating a sausage\*<|eor|><|sor|>You stop nodding and start abstaining <|eor|><|sor|>Do I really have to ?<|eor|><|sor|>Yes. if you wanna be rational. if you dont wanna be rational and rust then whatever!<|eor|><|sor|>If you're going to be like that, I'm going to learn Go.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
16
programmingcirclejerk
StallmanTheLeft
e9w85zr
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>> and respects you sure<|eor|><|sor|>[Why I respect vegans](https://www.reddit.com/r/vegan/comments/2bqjfh/why_i_respect_vegans/)<|eor|><|sor|>>Why I respect rustaceans<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
12
programmingcirclejerk
lobisquit
e9vagxb
<|sols|><|sot|>"I love Rust. But I feel that convincing people of its value is like convincing people to go vegan. Everyone nods and respects you, but dont really care and keep eating sausages."<|eot|><|sol|>https://twitter.com/migueldeicaza/status/1063575250485555208?s=19<|eol|><|sor|>Go vegan <|eor|><|sor|>Go Rust<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
11
programmingcirclejerk
rememberthesunwell
12qz83y
<|sols|><|sot|>Every single fucking time, "nice" Redditors reply: "Looks good!", "Amazing!", "Good Job!". When there are 50+ W3C validation errors<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/reactjs/comments/12pk6ew/comment/jgo2j66/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
140
programmingcirclejerk
starlevel01
jgscoit
<|sols|><|sot|>Every single fucking time, "nice" Redditors reply: "Looks good!", "Amazing!", "Good Job!". When there are 50+ W3C validation errors<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/reactjs/comments/12pk6ew/comment/jgo2j66/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3<|eol|><|sor|>excellent jerk material. guy is completely right but nevertheless is acting like a webshit anyway.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
122
programmingcirclejerk
ben_bliksem
jgs46vg
<|sols|><|sot|>Every single fucking time, "nice" Redditors reply: "Looks good!", "Amazing!", "Good Job!". When there are 50+ W3C validation errors<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/reactjs/comments/12pk6ew/comment/jgo2j66/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3<|eol|><|sor|>> I'm Dutch, it's in my culture to be more direct and I held back That my friend is a naturalised Dutchie or somebody with a Dutch grandfather, not a native.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
78
programmingcirclejerk
rememberthesunwell
jgsfk96
<|sols|><|sot|>Every single fucking time, "nice" Redditors reply: "Looks good!", "Amazing!", "Good Job!". When there are 50+ W3C validation errors<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/reactjs/comments/12pk6ew/comment/jgo2j66/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3<|eol|><|sor|>excellent jerk material. guy is completely right but nevertheless is acting like a webshit anyway.<|eor|><|soopr|>/uj I know, it could be literally 1 line of "hey, make sure your html is semantically valid in this way", instead we get this guys' fucking diatribe on how we'll never get a job it is a great jerk<|eoopr|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
64
programmingcirclejerk
UnShame
jgs2jbb
<|sols|><|sot|>Every single fucking time, "nice" Redditors reply: "Looks good!", "Amazing!", "Good Job!". When there are 50+ W3C validation errors<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/reactjs/comments/12pk6ew/comment/jgo2j66/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3<|eol|><|sor|>If your react todo example app isn't xhtml, wcag, section 508 and gdrp-compliant, what are you even doing with your life?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
63
programmingcirclejerk
ProgVal
jgs54kw
<|sols|><|sot|>Every single fucking time, "nice" Redditors reply: "Looks good!", "Amazing!", "Good Job!". When there are 50+ W3C validation errors<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/reactjs/comments/12pk6ew/comment/jgo2j66/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3<|eol|><|sor|>Didn't we agree that starting with HTML5, specs need to be changed to accommodate websites instead of the other way around?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
52
programmingcirclejerk
vimpostor
jgsih6f
<|sols|><|sot|>Every single fucking time, "nice" Redditors reply: "Looks good!", "Amazing!", "Good Job!". When there are 50+ W3C validation errors<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/reactjs/comments/12pk6ew/comment/jgo2j66/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3<|eol|><|sor|>> You know how we cover "being harsh" in the professional world? > 1. Go to the bookmarked Google Docs rejection letter; > 2. Copy; > 3. Paste; > 4. Change the name to that of the applicant; > 5. Send. Yawn, this is considered harsh these days? You know how we cover "being harsh" in the unprofessional (read: FOSS) world? 1. [Mauro, SHUT THE FUCK UP!](https://lkml.org/lkml/2012/12/23/75) 2. Fix your f*cking "compliance tool" 3. Send<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
51
programmingcirclejerk
enchufadoo
jgs3s1o
<|sols|><|sot|>Every single fucking time, "nice" Redditors reply: "Looks good!", "Amazing!", "Good Job!". When there are 50+ W3C validation errors<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/reactjs/comments/12pk6ew/comment/jgo2j66/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3<|eol|><|sor|>Look, you tested it on Chrome and it works? I've never seen any fellow webshit do anything more complicated than that.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
39
programmingcirclejerk
tomwhoiscontrary
jgs0isf
<|sols|><|sot|>Every single fucking time, "nice" Redditors reply: "Looks good!", "Amazing!", "Good Job!". When there are 50+ W3C validation errors<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.reddit.com/r/reactjs/comments/12pk6ew/comment/jgo2j66/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3<|eol|><|sor|>> w3c validator is mostly irrelevant. working in the sf / bay area for 7 years<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|>
33