It's not architecture, I mean stuff like sorting an array by something and not calculating that something correctly, traversing a graph and not accounting for an edge case if the graph isn't a tree, that sort of stuff.
@RonaldMunodawafa wow, you must be worth millions of dollars, you should offer that "write code without bug" service to big companies. I'm sure with your help Google wouldn't have any security issues anymore, and everyone else can benefit too.
@KendallFrey IO isn't specifically anything, it's different from a promise in that it's passed on to the platform which executes it - that's the cute part in IO monad vs a promise like continuation monad.
@KendallFrey it wouldn't be : Promise since promises are eager and show the result. It can be : Task where a Task is a promise returning function of some sort.
Is that because teacher is afraid of students playing instead of learning script with computer,so he gives you paper instead of learning with computer?
I actually moved to jumping and typing after several years. I still do all the thinking, but I just end up writing more code. It's often simple to implement 3 versions of the same thing and throw the bad two rather than debate which one to do for days.
It gives you a false sense of knowing how performance works. A language should be abstract, you should (as long as possible) debug its semantics and not the implemetnation.
@BenFortune make sure you're up to date on python, you probably want to know enough ruby to use chef or puppet, terraform is super relevant for cloud work, idk what else
@BenjaminGruenbaum We did our exam in Notepad so that we could entirely master the syntax and we would be confident we know exactly what we are doing. The webdev lecturer said if we didn't know a given function we needed to use and needed to check what its type signature was, we could always implement it ourselves
@RonaldMunodawafa that's silly of them and measures entirely the wrong thing (that you know the standard library rather than the concept). It's like they never read any of the research on how people learn programming.
Although the most important thing is that you're actually writing code.
If I get ".sice is not a function, did you mean .slice which makes a copy of a sub-part of an array or the whole array?" It's a lot better than "cannot read property of undefined object" or ".sice is not a function".
@BenFortune that might be good, it might not be. Plenty of companies call their sysadmin team devops but don't really run them like devs (or have folks with dev experience), and that sucks.
I wanted it for moonlight-stream, which has a chrome extension but only works with software decoding which is quite laggy on my laptop, so wanted hardware decoding
@BenjaminGruenbaum That is done in First Year. Past First Year, the assumption is you can learn any programming language required for you to use. I remember for our compilers class we switched from Pascal to Fortran to Parva while writing all of this in C# using Notepad++. The reason behind this is to get out of the way of the student and enable him to learn the hard way
@RonaldMunodawafa we seem to be using different terms, I want programs I use to be as helpful as possible and to contain a small'ish amount of features.
@RonaldMunodawafa languages are only interesting at a theoretical point of view, if I have to use Python and I don't have to use async/await then Python 2 is just fine
@RonaldMunodawafa Python has optional static typing for a while now. It's a very powerful language because the language features are pretty great and there are good libraries.
If you ever wrote machine learning code or image processing code it's nice for that.
Also, operating systems like OpenStack are written in Python.