

Amazing, very good decision.
They do ask for donations, and what a time to donate, to show that moral and human choices should be weighted as they have been done in this situation!


Amazing, very good decision.
They do ask for donations, and what a time to donate, to show that moral and human choices should be weighted as they have been done in this situation!
Pretty fun reading. Always good to see some theory and real world mixed.
The article talks about code interviews focusing on big O and how it can be misleading.
Nice that both Go and Python, a compiled and an interpreted language, are used in the examples, to higlight what is actually going on and how theory can/does differ from praxis.


Helix is absolutely wonderful.
Used to use Vim/Neovim, but the hassle of setting it up and maintaining huge configuration files was a pain (for me).
Also I never really got it working the way I wanted and never had LSP working for all the languages I needed.
Helix on the other hand. My config file is under 20 lines, LSP works super for all my needs. Well thought out keybindings (mostly) and overall a joy to use.
Nice features and fast.
Still a bunch of things missing, it is a rather young piece of software, but I have been using it as my only editor for the last 1 1/2 years.
Same here. Was going to give it a whirl. Not if there are a hundred trackers having fun in my browser.


So nerdy, so good
That’s the spirit!


How the fuck is this a thing? How are they allowed to control how I use my data?


I took a look at the “coder” and said no thanks.
I love your enthusiasm and I love that you are asking questions! Also cool that you feel an urge to learn.
That being said, it is rather many questions you are asking at the same time :)
Watch this brilliant series, it should give you a grasp of what is going on, then take it from there.
Computer Science Crash Course: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O5nskjZ_GoI&list=PL8dPuuaLjXtNlUrzyH5r6jN9ulIgZBpdo
Hit me up. Ie. contact me.


You did well in not using the /s


Unbearable. How does one even do it? Maybe some keyboard putting spaces after words?
Come on.
You should at least give us an introduction, like maybe: “Cryptids are Turing Machines whose behavior (when started on a blank tape) can be described completely by a relatively simple mathematical rule, but where that rule falls into a class of unsolved (and presumed hard) mathematical problems.”