Only Brazil is there because it has a big population.
Mobile software engineer.
Only Brazil is there because it has a big population.
I think when it comes to tooling, some Linux tools are actually BSD software that works because of POSIX compliance. An example is OpenSSH.
This kind of thing can be easily automated nowadays. It’s not really a problem.
And at that point you’ll also have a better idea of the problem and solution.
If I was gonna make a suggestion, it would be to use some formatting tool such as black to make sure your code is styled in a standard way.
As much as I do like programming in Java, you have a good point.
Or anything that downloads code from an untrusted source…
So many websites out there are built on Django, Flask, etc.
Mojo is surfing on the AI hype, so only time will tell whether it lives to fulfill the expectation.
Doing small contributions to Wikipedia is quite rewarding. Sometimes I add little stuff, as it doesn’t take much time and small improvements are more easily accepted in any page.
dependency injection is an abomination
I don’t think so, dependency injection has made testing easier in all static typed code bases I worked on.
Benchmarks should be like a scientific paper: they should describe all the choices made and why for the configurations. At least that will show if the people doing it really understand what they’re comparing.
The whole article seems a bit forced with many topics that are present in most other languages too. I don’t think “Faster release cycle” is one reason Java got where it is today.
The problem is people are lazy and most places I’ve been, peoeple make bad commit messages and often very non informative.
Just as an example, I worked as a contractor with the biggest bank in Latin America before and basically all their server code is Java (with new code in Kotlin nowadays).
Although I already agreed to it from a users’ perspective (the more protectionist, the worse user experience), this article is very thought provoking.
Unless they play the Twitter/X card and only allow seeing Reddit if you’re logged in and limit the amount of requests one account can make…
I have friends who work at the biggest bank in Latin America, where most backend stuff used to be Java. Nowadays all new code is written in Kotlin.
But I’m sure the fact Android is FOSS had nothing to do with it, it’s just a random coincidence. It would simply be the most popular OS.