this is fine when you're a junior learning but it's asking to get shit dumped on you later on. I think it's a good idea to pick a lane later on in your career and settle into it.
Ok
Testcontainers is great. It's got seamless junit integration and really Just Works. I've never once had to even think about any of the docker aspects of it. There's really not much to it.
I am the Walrus.
Isn't this pretty much what JSON streaming does?
I've been doing it for almost a year, am I missing something?
I had no idea this had a name. Sure wish I'd have known this while I was in school.
I personally almost always use loops (in Java) unless I know the dataset being dealt with is small, unless I'm writing stuff in Scala where maps and flatMaps are first class, but diving into Scala is its own can of…
They're hyperbolic and don't actually give you any useful information on why they're "harmful" or what's wrong with the subject being discussed.
If you're using Postgres, you can use recursive queries using common table expressions. Disqus implemented this sort of thing 10 years ago: https://pastebin.com/Fe2twMRr (I can't find the original talk for some reason)…
I really wish C# had more battle tested linux usage. I really love that language.
this is fine when you're a junior learning but it's asking to get shit dumped on you later on. I think it's a good idea to pick a lane later on in your career and settle into it.
Ok
Testcontainers is great. It's got seamless junit integration and really Just Works. I've never once had to even think about any of the docker aspects of it. There's really not much to it.
I am the Walrus.
Isn't this pretty much what JSON streaming does?
I've been doing it for almost a year, am I missing something?
I had no idea this had a name. Sure wish I'd have known this while I was in school.
I personally almost always use loops (in Java) unless I know the dataset being dealt with is small, unless I'm writing stuff in Scala where maps and flatMaps are first class, but diving into Scala is its own can of…
They're hyperbolic and don't actually give you any useful information on why they're "harmful" or what's wrong with the subject being discussed.
If you're using Postgres, you can use recursive queries using common table expressions. Disqus implemented this sort of thing 10 years ago: https://pastebin.com/Fe2twMRr (I can't find the original talk for some reason)…
I really wish C# had more battle tested linux usage. I really love that language.