Ich habe meinen Teil getan ;)
Ich Frage much nur: verstehen die wirklich nicht wie das Internet und Internet Communities funktionieren?
Ich habe meinen Teil getan ;)
Ich Frage much nur: verstehen die wirklich nicht wie das Internet und Internet Communities funktionieren?
Her life is normal. The depiction on the television is fiction. No reason to be envious
It's so human how - instead of admitting its error - it's pulling this bs right out of its ass 🤣
I think the article is ok, and yes I read it ;)
I think the title is unnecessary click-baity, because there are some relevant truths to it.
Most relevant truth us, that a lot of applications won't need async since they are not large enough, not IO bound etc..
I think one of the misconceptions in this article is, that the author arguments that you need to be an Amazon or google to benefit from async. This is not completely wrong but, as a software developer in the embedded system industry that I am, I must say it is also very relevant for embedded systems.
If someone read the article and is unsure about async, I can recommend these two articles that provide insights "from the other side" these means devs that actually find async relevant and beneficial:
https://notgull.net/why-you-want-async/
https://without.boats/blog/why-async-rust/ The article from boats is absolutely worth it. Even if you are an async sceptic.
Finally regarding the introduction of async APIs and abstractions into any code base:
Creating an async application or sync application is an architectural decision. And since architecture is the sum of all decisions that are hard to change (I think this is from Martin Fowler) thus decision - async or sync - is hard to change and one must live with it.
Yes, there are languages like Go or Erlang that resolve this async vs. sync problem, they come at a cost (having a runtime, at least Go has one afaik, I no nothing about Erlang). And choosing a particular language is also an architectural decision and hence hard to change.
Didn't read all, however, thanks for sharing. Made me laugh and I certainly needed a good laugh today
Automotive, Aerospace. Everywhere where you need safety qualifiable software (safety as in ISO 26262 or equivalent)
It's obviously not giving 110% as it should
Rust and Zig are currently my favorite languages.
The first-class dev and debugging experience, is this with Visual Studio or Rider as IDEs?
Because I currently do C# with Linux + neovim + Omnisharp as Language Server and it is really slow and bad. Do you have any tips?
I started hearing of it in 2021. Read through the documentation in February of 2022 and started to learn it in Fall of 2022. Ever since then I use both, Rust and Zig depending on the small project or concept I currently want to explore.
I wrote a blog post that describes the 3 things I like about both languages each: https://zigurust.gitlab.io/blog/posts/three-things/
Might be interesting.
They used to cause anxiety in the past as well. But there was a window where - at least I - didn't fear them. Main reason why I still think they are necessary are security patches. But I do fear updates due to their tendency in breaking things.
Same here. 10 years on my laptop and it broke only once: I accidentally closed the terminal where the initramfs was installed. So my mistake. I could fix it by using an arch install on an USB and my knowledge of how to install the system, since I did it myself, by hand.