@AaronHall I haven't looked into any of the videos, but judging by the titles it looks like he's following The Book, which I think is a really, really good idea. I'll watch some later to form my opinion. Thanks for the share!
That's funny. I've spent a few hours writing JS yesterday and I was surprised to find it an enjoyable and bug-free experience. It mostly depends on the codebase I think (it was on miaou)
@FrenchBoiethios I think you should start with some framework and some build system. While browsers are better nowadays, there are still some differences (and sometimes bugs) that the frameworks deal with for you. The build system allows you to write code for very new ES style but transpile it to support older versions
I would use std::iter::repeat to repeat every char value from the input. This creates an infinite iterator, but for your case we only need to iterate 2 times, so we can use take to limit our iterator, then flatten all the iterators that hold the doubled chars.
use std::iter;
fn main() {
le...
I think it comes down to flat_map isn't able to implement a good size_hint since it doesn't know what might happen
And too many people forget that CSS is code too, must be maintained and kept clean. I've seen too many old projects where people couldn't tell why there was a specific rule. This is bad
Is there a kinda monad notation in JS? I'm tired of doing: let foo = document.getElementById("foo"); if (foo != null) {...} I'd like to write document.getElementById("foo").do(elem => console.log("elem exists")).
I'm trying write a TCP server based on Tokio's example.
When I try to send the buffer, the compiler returns error 0277.
My code: (playground)
extern crate tokio; // 0.1.22
use tokio::codec::{BytesCodec, Decoder};
use tokio::net::TcpListener;
use tokio::prelude::*;
use bytes::Bytes; // 0.4.12...