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lol hipster. Well ruby just doesn't seem mainstream to me I gues. I don't know I met a bunch of guys who swore by it and all hipsters. Ruby seems over the top to me for web development
also in many cases well written JS / C++ code is usually faster than bad C. And in some of those cases its easier to write bad C code than good JS code.
Aaaanyways. I'm not trying to be argumentative. I'm too deep in Ruby, I probably can't see the forest for the trees. Maybe I'm hipster and I don't know it.
@jake Sort of? I write tests in parallel with code, since there it's the easiest way to actually run the code I'm writing. There's no GUI I can alt-tab to to interact with.
> Users will now be able to run Windows 10 Pro for Workstations on devices with high-performance configurations including server-grade Intel Xeon or AMD Opteron processors, with up to 4 CPUs (today limited to 2 CPUs) and add massive memory up to 6TB (today limited to 2TB).
> Our architectural changes in the Windows kernel take full advantage of high-end processors families, such as Intel Xeon or AMD Opteron, that package a high number of cores in single or multi-processor configurations.
I find it difficult to wrap my head around large codebases, feels too overwhelming. What's a good strategy of understanding a codebase so that I can contribute to it?
@Jules somehow it started to work. I messaged to lead senior dev, he came to my desk, I was like "look app doesnt work when I start it, I start app, holy shit it wasnt working a minute ago!" — westdabestdb2 hours ago
Hey all, I have a question here. I'm looking for a JS microframework for implementing REST APIs but my chief requirement is that the code for defining endpoints look as much like Flask as possible. Any hits?
@Cereal Probably as close as it gets, I decided to use Express. I was looking for something a little friendlier. I'm preparing demo apps for students, contrasting Python with JS and Ruby.
Looking at some videos about promises in node.js they guy uses error() to print things he now would error out and log() for everything else. Is there a main difference between these 2 functions besides printing things in distinct colours?
In any situation where another person can quote chapter and verse of the manual and it directly answers your question, RTFM must always be a valid answer. If the manual doesn't address their question, they should lead by quoting the manual and explaining why the information therein doesn't work for them.
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Just fyi, I wasn't "laughing" at you at all, rather at Kevin's answer, which was perfectly correct but similarly perfectly useless for anyone who would ask the question you asked.
How good is that for creating "office like" web applications? Our team is considering moving away from sencha/extjs. However we develop mainly applications that need a professional/office like look. (Such as management tools for a printing company). Sencha did bring a very complete set of widgets that integrated well together.
the version we are using doesn't have a working date picker, and the select control doesn't return focus back to the correct location in the form so you can't keep tabbing through the form
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Hmm harder... But with all those self learning code I'm certain it's possible to create a bot that just looks for simple copy-past answers on SO to farm xp.