Do we really need a video about this in 2024? Shouldn’t this be already a core part of our education as software engineers?
Do we really need a video about this in 2024? Shouldn’t this be already a core part of our education as software engineers?
The title of the post is “how to avoid if-else hell”, not “how to avoid conditionals”. Not sure what’s your point.
So you probably have to go and fix it now. Good luck.
It’s a joke… Before I’m sentenced to death by downvotes.
Learning how Systemd manages the network was a total mindfuck. There are so many alternatives, all of them being used differently by different tools, partially supported. networkd, Network Manager… There were other tools, they shared similar files but had them in different /etc or /usr folders. There were unexpected interactions between the tools… Oh man, it was so bad. I was very disappointed.
I was really into learning how things really worked in Linux and this was a slap to my face because my mindset was “Linux is so straightforward”. No, it is not, it is actually a mess like most systems. I know this isn’t a “Linux” issue, I’m just ranting about this specific ecosystem.
And yet, the worst design choice was how this meme template was used.
The moment you finally install arch and your realize you still feel empty inside.
For large companies that serve many customers 5K per year is a drop in a bucket. If it provides their customers with a more secure experience, it is worth it.
OK but why were you getting aroused by a tool?
I’ve only had beef with a single dev ever. The maintainer of Prometheus, Brian Brazil, or whatever his name is. His attitude is so shitty towards people proposing actually good ideas that would push his product forward.
You IMPLIED? That’s even worse than assuming. Life sentence.
Damn, you assumed pronouns like 4 times. Get ready to go to trans jail (jk)
My expectation is that this is something core that programmers should be aware of all the time. Forgetting about this is like forgetting what an interface is. It’s at the core of what we do. At least I think so, maybe I’m wrong assuming this is something every programmer should be aware of all the time.