Code: (ns impressive.core) (defn -main "But it's so functional." [] (println "...I couldn't agree more."))
Lots of them will rotate on their mount. I work with 3 x 24'' Dells (http://www.dell.com/yu/business/p/dell-p2417h-monitor/pd) beside each other in a sort of curved 5760x1080 setup. DisplayFusion is my ride or die.
DEATH TO JAVASCRIPT - Recently Microsoft announced the first preview build of their Blazor front-end framework. Uses WebAssembly to run C# Razor and HTML based components client side. https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/we...ding-net-web-apps-in-the-browser-with-blazor/
That seems unlikely considering created and maintains Typescript which has only gotten more popular the past couple of years.
Anybody done any image processing in python? Going to be getting some high speed video next week and need to extract velocity. Have a feeling I’ll be stack overflowing hard.
The .Net frameworks are server-side frameworks. Blazor - or a similar javascript framework - allows for client-side execution of code. In this case, C# is run through WebAssembly (http://webassembly.org/) to do all the client-side work in the browser.
Being the only developer on a project is probably not going to help me whenever I have to work on a team again wrt proper git usage.
we still have a guy who, for whatever reason, can't manage to not break stuff, so we let him play in his own branch and merge for him
Python question of the day. How closely do you stick with PEP styling? for example I have to filter out an item in a list. My go to was this Code: if search_term in returned_keywords: returned_keywords.remove(search_term) one line, in english, and very straight forward. the idiomatic (and probably performant solution) version looks something like this: Code: while True: try: returned_keywords.remove(search_term) except ValueError: break I stuck with my original thought process, but thought'd it'd bring up an interesting discussion.
Here is a dumb way list(np.array(returned_keywords)[np.in1d(returned_keywords,search_term,invert=True)])
Ive seen devs using a larger oversized one, but no way in hell anything would get done on a regular sized one.
I'm wanting to learn object-oriented programming online. My experience in programming has largely been procedural, mostly PHP and JavaScript, but I'm open to tutorials based on other languages. I feel like every time that I try to dive into OOP, I get a smattering of different parts of it without getting the whole picture. I'm looking for a site that will force me to build projects from simple to complex. Any recommendations?
anyone know how to integrate matplotlib with flask and jinja2? also, what IDE does everyone use? I started out with spyder since it's in the anaconda suite, but I'm really liking pycharm right now
That's exactly the example I'm going off of, but I guess my question needs to be more specific. I'd like to not have to save it as a PNG because the graph I need to create should be dynamic and change frequently. The route I'm thinking right now is recreating a PNG any time the graph adjusts to a change in a parameter, but I wasn't sure if there was a better/more efficient way of doing that.
Yea. I don't have any desire to mount a big defense, but a lot of those people learned to hate it before it received oo
I'd probably feel the same, but at some point you're going to have to learn something you may not like. I have seen a scary number of longtime oldschool Java and .NET developers who have not been successful at staying employed in new jobs because they struggled to learn React or some other new framework. I legit worry so much about plateauing in a decade and suddenly struggle to find work.
agreed and that's how I feel about learning Clojure right now I started with Python, and now this past year i picked up Elixir and Elm. Hoping to start with React soon to learn something a little more mainstream definitely good to always stat current and always try and learn new things
I have to do another year long project for school, this time by myself. I'm indecisive as hell but I kind of want to do some kind of prediction modeling for sports betting and maybe make a web app out of it. Anyone have experience with that sort of thing? Or some other suggestion for what might be cool to work on.
I use PHP quite a bit, so that would work. I'm open to working with C# or other oo languages. I only do this on the side, so I'm self taught. I could put some oo code together, but I feel like I wouldn't be learning the right way to do it (best practices). I guess I'd like to find a tutorial/book that would show example projects from simple up to very complicated so that I could correctly learn how to use oo concepts, like design patterns.
currently on humble bundle. figured i'd post it just in case: https://www.humblebundle.com/softwa...ayout_index_2_layout_type_threes_tile_index_2 includes some pretty cool stuff depending on what you pay, including a 2 month pycharm professional license, $50 credit for digital ocean, gitkraken pro, a 1 year subscription to pyup, and some other stuff. a lot of it is focused on people new to the language, but a good deal nonetheless.
Jerking myself off again. Took me a while, a lot of studying and several practice exams, but I passed the AWS DevOps Professional certification exam. *pats self on back*
My next big learning process is going to be getting my existing projects onto continuous integration with Octopus Deploy and TeamCity. No real devops experience to speak of so this will be fun.