Folks, we are getting close to releasing the scientific paper on my #Code Review Anxiety research and I am so so excited to share this with the world. From a methods perspective, I'm extremely proud that we used clinical research methods and standards to explore intervention targets, then develop and assess the outcomes of an evidence-based code review anxiety intervention.
From a clinical perspective, I am always just overjoyed to bring an empirical understanding of anxiety to new spaces. #Code review anxiety is real. It matters. It affects #developers across identities and experience levels. And we can do something about it. Stay tuned for the full report!
Personally, I have nothing against the emergence of new #programming languages. This is cool:
the industry does not stand still;
competition allows existing languages to develop and borrow features from new ones;
developers have the opportunity to learn new things while avoiding #burnout;
there is a choice for beginners;
there is a choice for specific tasks.
But why do most people dislike the :clang: #clang so much? But it remains the fastest among high-level languages. Who benefits from C being suppressed and attempts being made to replace him? I think there is only one answer - companies. Not developers. Developers are already reproducing the opinion imposed on them by the market. Under the #influence of hype and the opinions of others, they form the idea that C is a useless language. And most importantly, oh my god, he's unsafe. Memory usage. But you as a #programmer are (and must be) responsible for the #code you write, not a language. And the one way not to do bugs - not doing them.
Personally, I also like the :hare_lang: #harelang. Its performance is comparable to C, but its syntax and elegance are more modern.
And in general, I’m not against new languages, it’s a matter of taste. But when you learn a language, write in it for a while, and then realize that you are burning out 10 times faster than before, you realize the cost of memory safety.
On top of the recently added #Rust and #Cpp libraries, you can now also find the Slint source code on codebrowser.dev - the online code browser allowing you to browse #code just like in your IDE. Try it out and let us know what you think about this addition: https://codebrowser.dev/slint/slint/#RustLang@slint
Some tasks take too long for us to want to wait around for them to finish, like when you want to power down your computer and go to bed. So schedule a shutdown...
Eu faço parte do canal @codeshowbr to com esse projeto one-minute para apresentar um pouco sobre a linguagem Python no formato de vídeos curtos.
Tenho um foco principalmente para pessoas iniciantes na área, mostrando alguns trechos de código e como eles funcionam.
If data (words, images, music, stats, etc) is the new code (in the sense that it is required for creating computer programs which achieve a desired output), shouldn't it be similarly valued by our society and economy?
Shouldn't the creatives whose works enabled the existence of technology that would otherwise be impossible with hand-coded algorithms be, at the very least, credited and compensated for their contribution?
Think it’s fair to say my current editor of choice (free one) is Zed. Clearly still in development but overall a really solid editor that covers most of my needs. Hope they eventually expand to Linux and Windows so the community at large can enjoy it. #dev#zed#code
What are some techniques you use to get better at coding/programming? At 40, I feel like I take a lot of granted in my experience and retained knowledge. #code#development#software
What's the best way to share code snippets on Mastodon that considers accessibility?
Without the ability to format toots (e.g. markdown), it seems like code to image generators are the way to go. But what about the alt-text? Should I just copy the code as-is in the alt-text?
Use <page syntax-highlighter> to get the default highlight.js themes applied to markdown code blocks. The default themes are Tokyo Night Light and Dark, which go well with the default colours of the Water semantic CSS library, which Kitten also has first-class support for.
Use syntax-highlighter-theme-light & …-dark to manually pick highlight.js themes (see https://highlightjs.org/demo)
When I was a young Commodore-era game developer, C (without the ++ or # back then) was for wimps, and hardcore coders used Assembly, ditching the OS to have maximum available hardware resources. 👴
Oha, das ist ja ein cooles #CSS#Framework. Habe es erst jetzt entdeckt und der #Code zum Anwenden im HTML Vorlagen ist so schön schlank, sprich nicht vorhanden. Auf dem ersten Blick mag ich es und muss es dringend ausprobieren.
Warum sind die meisten populären #Web#Styling Tools dem gegenüber fett?
Since I am learning #Rust again and for other reasons, it takes longer for me to understand #RustLang. Well, today I solved the above mentioned problem. I #learned not to be annoyed by error messages when compiling because the written code does not work. Just read it carefully and take it into account and the #errors are solved and for me these are mostly sapalotte typos – tomorrow it goes on positively ➕🦀