@PeterVaro Personally I'm also for keeping most texts in English too when they're not translated. The biggest jump to do for many people isn't to be able to read and write in English but to be comfortable in an oral conversation of conference.
@DenysSéguret Couldn't agree more! Besides, although I would argue that if one chooses a career as a software engineer then one must be comfortable reading articles and listening to talks in English as the vast majority of these are in it, however that could come at a later stage and until then getting familiar with concepts, gain deeper understanding of things, and being able to talk about them with their peers in one's native tongue would certainly remove a significant barrier.
So, you know, even from the audience's perspective it is a massive win, that's what I was trying to say.
That being said though, if there would be a super interesting talk, say, in Croatian, I would be very sad to miss the opportunity to be able to listen to it.
The str.replaceAll method in JavaScript and it accepting a String next to a regular expression gives me such pain :( This is the second time I've done str.replaceAll("/\bword\b/", "replacement") and was puzzled for minutes by it not working.
This kind of bug is familiar except the part where you type a string instead of a regex literal. Maybe it's because of your syntax highlighting. regex literals don't feel at all like string literals to me
I'm not entirely sure if my memory plays tricks on me, but I have a hazy recollection that automatic spell-checking had been introduced to the std's documentation. Is that correct? If so, does any of you know what tools they are using and with what configuration?