10 private links
Some coding challenges for the weekend and increasing my knowledge of a given language.
From Lobste.rs
Via Sebsauvage a personal wiki in a single HTML file
Interesting practices especially the pet about separating the message and the parameters. Also great point about logging after the action happened and not before.
Recommended book on /r/rust
From https://letterstoanewdeveloper.com/2021/07/05/youll-always-be-learning/
A good read on the future of our industry
some good read about literal programming that I didn't know about
Apparently, one of the best article ever written for DP.
– source
Deep dive into Java Objects
A great article about the problems that inheritance brings to OOP. Heard of it from https://sebsauvage.net/links/?jAvKBw
TL;DR but interesting dive into analog <> digital conversion
For when I want to dive back into functional programming, this seems like a good introduction to Haskell, then Elm and finally NixOS.
[EDIT] link's dead, replaced with archive.org because the current one returns p0rn
The language for beginners in functional programming, not for production
(...) the code that parses those events’ payloads only worries about the fields the application needs, and it ignores extraneous ones. A static type system doesn’t require you eagerly write a schema for the whole universe, it simply requires you to be up front about the things you need.
And I need to read more about the double-validation fallacy that the author is mentioning
Something to always keep in mind.
The human principles of software are truly timeless; The Psychology of Computer Programming was written way back in 1971, a year after I was born!
A good reference to keep handy about character sets
A good read (haven't had the opportunity yet, but comes highly recommended from Jon Moter @ Zendesk).
State > Coupling > Complexity > Duplication
Amazing history of an hardware engineer at Atari
Free book on game programming patterns. Found while reading BloogBot website.