My enterprise document approval workflow management software has never looked so beautiful. Thank you Enterprise Piet!
The #1 job of HR is to make sure they don't get their asses sued or fined for violating hiring and employment law. The #2 job is to help hire and retain good people. What raganwald's fictional letter shows is that…
> There can be no limitations of any kind in terms of expressing to the machine, precisely how the machine should behave. I hear what you're saying but you're overselling C here. Straight up ANSI C has a lot of…
Really old? E comes from the mid to late 90's. In Tiobe's current top 20 only C# and Go are newer than that. While E seems to be deadish, many of its core ideas around object capability security (ocaps) live on. Others…
> Haskell and Scala are closest in that they're strongly, statically typed with Hindley-Milner type inference > Haskell has the most sophisticated type system--by far, I think it's fair to say HM is a type…
My enterprise document approval workflow management software has never looked so beautiful. Thank you Enterprise Piet!
The #1 job of HR is to make sure they don't get their asses sued or fined for violating hiring and employment law. The #2 job is to help hire and retain good people. What raganwald's fictional letter shows is that…
> There can be no limitations of any kind in terms of expressing to the machine, precisely how the machine should behave. I hear what you're saying but you're overselling C here. Straight up ANSI C has a lot of…
Really old? E comes from the mid to late 90's. In Tiobe's current top 20 only C# and Go are newer than that. While E seems to be deadish, many of its core ideas around object capability security (ocaps) live on. Others…
> Haskell and Scala are closest in that they're strongly, statically typed with Hindley-Milner type inference > Haskell has the most sophisticated type system--by far, I think it's fair to say HM is a type…