All true but there is still quite a bit of inefficiency involved if you need a team that is both proficient in deploying & running Linux infrastructure tools as well as Windows servers. And given that this discussion is…
Many of us have .NET experience, really like C# but have sensible reasons for not recommending it. A Microsoft only stack is nowhere near as flexible as Linux and if you were to reach Stack Overflow's levels of traffic…
This is one of the reasons I use Go in favour of pretty much anything running on the JVM stack. I don't have to change my workflow at all between working in Python, C, Go and JS. I can use vim for all of the above and…
Seems like you post a picture to it and it returns the colour palette used. Seems pretty useful if you're into that kind of thing.
Actually, it's not that uncommon for an Icelander to have a matronymic surname.
I wonder whether it would be unethical of Google to the ISP's customers.
It's not popular on HN for a reason. Even if you run everything on Mono, for practical reasons you are tied to Windows as a development platform and that's a major issue for just about anyone who does their development…
Not really a fair feature comparison. If db migration wasn't in Rails, ActiveRecord wouldn't work the way it does. You can't say the same about Django's ORM.
I'd be more inclined to recommend VMWare for our in-office needs if I can conveniently move VMs off to an OpenStack supporting public cloud. VMWare's offerings are good enough to compete with any private cloud out there…
If you need to learn a framework then PHP loses simplicity, one of the few things its got going for itself. And if your needs validate the use of a framework, you'd probably be better off with RoR or Django.
Stay tuned for "What the Holocaust can teach you about gardening".
I had no idea either. I started programming in college but it wasn't until we were taught assembly that I realized that what I had been doing as a kid with softice had been assembly all along.
Of course you can, anything is possible, including convincing yourself Spring is as productive as Rails or Django :) Nothing against Java, it's the best tool for the job on many occasions but launching quickly and…
But you're not going to be able to build a Pintrest or a Instagram with 5 people in 2 years with Spring.
Or that it hasn't fixed the warts it has. I use Ruby rarely enough to really, really miss explicit imports. I guess it's not a problem if you use it all the time and magically know what's in the global namespace at any…
All true but there is still quite a bit of inefficiency involved if you need a team that is both proficient in deploying & running Linux infrastructure tools as well as Windows servers. And given that this discussion is…
Many of us have .NET experience, really like C# but have sensible reasons for not recommending it. A Microsoft only stack is nowhere near as flexible as Linux and if you were to reach Stack Overflow's levels of traffic…
This is one of the reasons I use Go in favour of pretty much anything running on the JVM stack. I don't have to change my workflow at all between working in Python, C, Go and JS. I can use vim for all of the above and…
Seems like you post a picture to it and it returns the colour palette used. Seems pretty useful if you're into that kind of thing.
Actually, it's not that uncommon for an Icelander to have a matronymic surname.
I wonder whether it would be unethical of Google to the ISP's customers.
It's not popular on HN for a reason. Even if you run everything on Mono, for practical reasons you are tied to Windows as a development platform and that's a major issue for just about anyone who does their development…
Not really a fair feature comparison. If db migration wasn't in Rails, ActiveRecord wouldn't work the way it does. You can't say the same about Django's ORM.
I'd be more inclined to recommend VMWare for our in-office needs if I can conveniently move VMs off to an OpenStack supporting public cloud. VMWare's offerings are good enough to compete with any private cloud out there…
If you need to learn a framework then PHP loses simplicity, one of the few things its got going for itself. And if your needs validate the use of a framework, you'd probably be better off with RoR or Django.
Stay tuned for "What the Holocaust can teach you about gardening".
I had no idea either. I started programming in college but it wasn't until we were taught assembly that I realized that what I had been doing as a kid with softice had been assembly all along.
Of course you can, anything is possible, including convincing yourself Spring is as productive as Rails or Django :) Nothing against Java, it's the best tool for the job on many occasions but launching quickly and…
But you're not going to be able to build a Pintrest or a Instagram with 5 people in 2 years with Spring.
Or that it hasn't fixed the warts it has. I use Ruby rarely enough to really, really miss explicit imports. I guess it's not a problem if you use it all the time and magically know what's in the global namespace at any…