> So what should we use instead of signal? Threema is one alternative.
This comparison is laughable and ignorant.
So Go was designed for toddlers?
I worked for a company where the founder thought everybody should use the same tools (meaning the tools he used: OpenSuse, KDE, VSCode, etc...) so that we can help each other and, like you propose, we wouldn't have to…
> I'm using Arch Linux and it's the most stable operating system I've ever used. lol (from an arch user)
A garbage collector of obviously lack of magic.
That's what they tell you.
> considering the dystopian state of Chinese government (compared to Western governments, at least) Would you trust a sheep in wolf's clothing or a wolf in wolf's clothing more? Western culture and ideals are nothing…
> Generics are a tail abstraction. Its the last abstraction that you are able to make to your code to reduce boilerplate. This usually means that is the least useful and in generics specific case the boiler place it…
> This also prevents errors being dropped by accident. Instead of designing a language that prevents errors from being dropped by accident, hire a bunch of literal gophers to search your codebase for inverbosity. Good…
> And things like the lack of abstractions and generics are what create a community that's less reliant on dependencies. "A little copying is better than a little dependency" and you can see it in stark contrast to…
> While not objectively a bad thing, that's at the crux of the problem many have with Go: it sets the bar very, very low for getting in your way instead of trusting you to be even slightly competent. And there's nothing…
> I tend to specialise in the sort of software infrastructure-y problems that are usually solved through code. So basically a coder?
> Everyone's upset that Go is Google's language, but no one would have adopted it if it weren't. I guess because it does not merit that adoption. The only reason it gets attention at all is either 1) "oh it's made by…
(I'm going to ignore the personal attack and insult) > If you want to talk figuratively, making mistakes does not constitute having your "head up your ass." Even making multiple mistakes doesn't warrant that kind of…
> Generics are slower, that's the trade-off. Developer time vs. execution time. You have no idea what you're talking about. > Saying Go has it's head up it's ass is extremely disrespectful to the people that created it…
Could be. I don't know which one came first.
strtok is there for things like and similar to /etc/hosts and /etc/fstab
VS Code takes ~6 seconds from clicking its icon to having its window show up. On an 8th-gen Intel i7 with an SSD. Yes Electron has abysmal performance.
I don't want to be defending Rust but your post has so many misconceptions. May I ask where you got all that information and what your background is? > C++ at least has extern "C" going for it, which disables name…
> From a point of view of postmodern c++, rust has little to no advantages left. My entire adult life I've been writing C, I resisted Rust for a while but took the plunge when a C++ project came along that was in dire…
Can someone explain why this is better than branch, commit and rebase from master if needed, then submit the pull request?
When you search in the API documentation, you will find 3 tabs at the top: "In Names", "In Parameters" and "In Return Types". Example: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/?search=option
I just think it's the opposite. Those without constant distractions and expenses end up being more productive and richer.
This is gold! Thank you! :D
> So what should we use instead of signal? Threema is one alternative.
This comparison is laughable and ignorant.
So Go was designed for toddlers?
I worked for a company where the founder thought everybody should use the same tools (meaning the tools he used: OpenSuse, KDE, VSCode, etc...) so that we can help each other and, like you propose, we wouldn't have to…
> I'm using Arch Linux and it's the most stable operating system I've ever used. lol (from an arch user)
A garbage collector of obviously lack of magic.
That's what they tell you.
> considering the dystopian state of Chinese government (compared to Western governments, at least) Would you trust a sheep in wolf's clothing or a wolf in wolf's clothing more? Western culture and ideals are nothing…
> Generics are a tail abstraction. Its the last abstraction that you are able to make to your code to reduce boilerplate. This usually means that is the least useful and in generics specific case the boiler place it…
> This also prevents errors being dropped by accident. Instead of designing a language that prevents errors from being dropped by accident, hire a bunch of literal gophers to search your codebase for inverbosity. Good…
> And things like the lack of abstractions and generics are what create a community that's less reliant on dependencies. "A little copying is better than a little dependency" and you can see it in stark contrast to…
> While not objectively a bad thing, that's at the crux of the problem many have with Go: it sets the bar very, very low for getting in your way instead of trusting you to be even slightly competent. And there's nothing…
> I tend to specialise in the sort of software infrastructure-y problems that are usually solved through code. So basically a coder?
> Everyone's upset that Go is Google's language, but no one would have adopted it if it weren't. I guess because it does not merit that adoption. The only reason it gets attention at all is either 1) "oh it's made by…
(I'm going to ignore the personal attack and insult) > If you want to talk figuratively, making mistakes does not constitute having your "head up your ass." Even making multiple mistakes doesn't warrant that kind of…
> Generics are slower, that's the trade-off. Developer time vs. execution time. You have no idea what you're talking about. > Saying Go has it's head up it's ass is extremely disrespectful to the people that created it…
Could be. I don't know which one came first.
strtok is there for things like and similar to /etc/hosts and /etc/fstab
VS Code takes ~6 seconds from clicking its icon to having its window show up. On an 8th-gen Intel i7 with an SSD. Yes Electron has abysmal performance.
I don't want to be defending Rust but your post has so many misconceptions. May I ask where you got all that information and what your background is? > C++ at least has extern "C" going for it, which disables name…
> From a point of view of postmodern c++, rust has little to no advantages left. My entire adult life I've been writing C, I resisted Rust for a while but took the plunge when a C++ project came along that was in dire…
Can someone explain why this is better than branch, commit and rebase from master if needed, then submit the pull request?
When you search in the API documentation, you will find 3 tabs at the top: "In Names", "In Parameters" and "In Return Types". Example: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/?search=option
I just think it's the opposite. Those without constant distractions and expenses end up being more productive and richer.
This is gold! Thank you! :D