I was talking more generally about LLMs here
I was talking more generally about LLMs here
I’ve found they’re great as a learning tool where decent docs are available. Or as an interactive docs you can ask follow up questions to.
We mostly use c# and it’s amazing at digging into the MS docs to pull out useful things from the bcl or common patterns.
Our new juniors got up to speed so fast by asking it to explain stuff in the existing codebases. Which in turn takes pressure off more senior staff.
I got productive in vuejs in a large codebase in a couple days that way.
Using to generate actual code is insanely shit haha It is very similar to just copy pasting code and hacking it in without understanding it.
I think with http request failures losing the status code can be a real pain. There’s a big difference between 400, 401, 404 and 500 for instance.
I wouldn’t call bad readability a loaded gun really. Your dev tools will hopefully make it pretty easy to learn the type. It should be a minor inconvenience at best.
The problem with dynamic typing is you can’t always figure out what the type is even with investigation as it can be lots of things based on what is passed or returned. It also allows incorrect values to be passed.
People will indeed make that readability argument but if the type is not obvious and important to understanding the code then it likely shouldn’t be used there.
auto isn’t dynamic typing it’s just type inference. It still has a fixed type you just don’t have to write it. Like var in C#.
Lambdas are just a way of defining methods in place. It has nothing to do with callbacks.
But you’re spot on for memory safety. Managing it yourself is risky and if it can be managed at zero cost it seems stupid not to.
You’re unpleasant to talk to.
I guess you can argue it’s already written in C. So that was always a requirement.
I mean I’ve still yet to hear a reason not to use rust tbf.
But yes that’s what working in a team is like.
I have to do stuff at work so I don’t fuck over the frontend team. I don’t throw a little tantrum about it.
I think the point is they aren’t forcing it at all. It’s being used with the blessing of Linux Jesus and the others are just throwing their toys out of the pram because they don’t want to learn it.
Someone else linked the video on this post. They are rude as hell and the rust dev isn’t even asking them to use it.
Again I think that’s a bad attitude towards technology. Use the best tool for the job and you’d get used to the syntax pretty quickly.
It’s like someone who started on python not wanting to learn a c style language.
It is literally being pushed for its technical merits and traits.
Memory safe code with comparable performance in the kernel seems like an absolute no brainer.
Also if you watch the video all he’s asking for is consistent interfaces for the file systems. He’s not even trying to get them to use rust. And the guy starts screeching about how he’ll code however he wants.
Is it wrong to expect a consistent and well documented interface?
Pretty sure C is actually being pushed against its technical merits here.
Wow what an absolute dick
Here’s the thing, you’re not going to force all of us to learn Rust
That seems like a poor attitude imo.
Start with a git GUI application. I use git extensions on windows.
You’ll be able to get a feel for how it all works and it actually shows you the commands it’s running.
I also use bingai a lot when learning. The more specific your question the more likely you are to run into hallucinations and that. But for explaining basic concepts or query things that are well documented it’s really good.
It also sources it’s answers so you can follow the link for further reading if needed.
Just don’t trust it to generate large amounts of code.
A flat 50 column table is usually an indicator of bad design and lack of normalization.
Nosql is absolutely ideal for flat data with lots of columns and huge amounts of rows. It’s like one of its main use cases.
That many parameters is an indicator of poorly structured queries and spaghetti code. There is no way that’s the best way the data can be structured.
While it is popular in the web browser world, it is not inherent to it. Reactive programming is a general programming paradigm that can be applied anywhere, without a UI involved.
Second paragraph
No. This seems like a poorly designed system. Definitely sounds like a nosql database would be a much better fit for this task.
And that many parameters seems like madness haha
“I can easily do it on my phone” is also good.
If a Zoox robot taxi encounters a construction zone it has not seen before, for instance, a technician in the command center will receive an alert
Seems perfectly sensible
Super nice to have a proper metric.
People always talk about how great rust is. But I feel how gross c++ is isn’t talked about enough.