I don't get reactive or functional. I get, step 1 do something, step 2 if something then do step 4 else step 3. Those were really the days. I guess if I could have my dream framework today it would be just Java and some…
I'm thinking of changing my resume to 1 page with a 72 pt sized question mark.
Death by a thousand annotations, which used to be death by a thousand XML files.
> Meanwhile, Oracle owns a lot of Java products That doesn't make Oracle bad or Pivotal good.
> I see two import aspects that Spring provide: first, dependency injection/inversion of control as basis and then a way to 1000+1 things "right". DI creates debugging nightmares by moving what used to be compile time…
I don't get reactive or functional. I get, step 1 do something, step 2 if something then do step 4 else step 3. Those were really the days. I guess if I could have my dream framework today it would be just Java and some…
I'm thinking of changing my resume to 1 page with a 72 pt sized question mark.
Death by a thousand annotations, which used to be death by a thousand XML files.
> Meanwhile, Oracle owns a lot of Java products That doesn't make Oracle bad or Pivotal good.
> I see two import aspects that Spring provide: first, dependency injection/inversion of control as basis and then a way to 1000+1 things "right". DI creates debugging nightmares by moving what used to be compile time…