@BartekBanachewicz You know, if a method has a default parameter in Python and you change it in one call, it'd stay changed in the next? Pretty funny huh? So if you have an empty list as a default parameter and you change it in the method, it'll actually stay changed the next time you call the method instead of giving you a new default.
Betteridge's law of headlines is an adage that states: "Any headline which ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no." It is named after Ian Betteridge, a British technology journalist, although the general concept is much older. The observation has also been called "Davis' law" or just the "journalistic principle".
Betteridge explained the concept in a February 2009 article, regarding a TechCrunch article with the headline "Did Last.fm Just Hand Over User Listening Data To the RIAA?":
This story is a great demonstration of my maxim that any headline which ends in a question...
The addition of two numbers is defined as the limit of a sequence that is the sum of two sequences that represent those numbers. We have limit arithmetic and shit.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Say, you have a large application with 50 developers. One of them adds new functionality, which expects some input to be a number, but it's actually a numeric string. He does some arithmatic, and the result becomes NaN. Isn't that a bad idea compared to a runtime error?
It could even become a valid number, but different than expected
@copy I don't work with those kind of people. Those are the kind of people who needprivate and protected in Java and don't bother asking, reading or writing unit tests or writing an API :)
@BartekBanachewicz Well, we need to establish if something that's more theoretically correct should replace a less-accurate (but still useful) generally accepted thing.
@BartekBanachewicz Well, we need to establish if something that's more theoretically correct should replace a less-accurate (but still useful) generally accepted thing.
@copy no, the return value must be at least as strict and the arguments at least as permissive. (method argument contravariance, return type covariance)
@BenjaminGruenbaum what you're saying is that we should write documentation for every method that has ambiguous return type. Why is specifying its return type worse?
@SomeKittensUx2666 who cares, it's a fucking number. Just like pi and tau.
@BenjaminGruenbaum That's a decent answer, but you're just getting around "JavaScript does this better than Python" or "Python does this better than JavaScript"
@BartekBanachewicz it's really not, what I was saying there (and somehow everyone else in this room including copy got) is the fact that in my head a really smart language would be smart enough to shout at something like 3+"3" -1 and still allow me something like "Hello "+name. Although Python does a good job with templating.
This is a real problem "Lol" is thrown, with no stack trace, you have no idea who threw it or why and you don't have any way to catch it except for a global handler.
No argument there, this is very frustrating. It's a lot less of an issue in the past 2 years and it's a lot less of an issue in Node than in the browser but still.
npm really helped, but the fact there is no peer review process on packages is very problematic - there are some really good ones but there is no way to know which is which.
@BartekBanachewicz have you ever done any PHP? I think you might like it, it has . for string concat instead of +.
@SomeKittensUx2666 that's my way of dealing with trash; to bin it indeed. Want to discuss, stop trolling and being annoying and use real arguments. Otherwise just get the fuck out of here.
@BartekBanachewicz php has a sort function that acts like you'd expect. It has a huge standard library, it has static typing for complex types (the ones you define yourself) and naming is a syntactic argument so I'll not even dignify it. Next please.
@BartekBanachewicz lol, I find that statement really amusing ^^
@copy yeah, you have (but need to npm/bower install) libraries for all of those. I'm still waiting for that to be automated much better or standardized.