Some things we have to buy without know the cost, hospital/doctor fees, insurance can surprise you, etc.
Some things we have to buy without know the cost, hospital/doctor fees, insurance can surprise you, etc.
I’ve found they really help with unit tests. Sometimes with regular code they straight up make up libraries that aren’t real.
yeah but it’s like 5" high.
I’ve been seeing a lot of Perl jokes lately and as far as legacy code I haven’t had to edit anything written in that in 25 or so years. For those that haven’t used it, getting form variables and rudimentary things like that were like equivalent to regular expressions, everything had some obscure expression you had to look up or copy paste.
They were amazing for years and switched from push notifications to iMessage and broke everything, used to work to allow from Apple Watch, now that function appears to work but doesn’t do anything
Those companies that judge output by lines of code are asking for this
Sounds like a good thing but they’ll probably just raise our premiums 50%
Copied basic code out of computer magazines, read a DOS 3.1 book cover to cover in the 80s as a kid. Just always drawn to it. Today I wrote some bicep code to allow my dev team to access the key vault in the lower environments but not the upper. I’ve done Vb6, flash actionscript, objective c, Java, C#, python, C++, SQL, ruby, spingboot, jquery, angular, react, Perl, PHP, VBA, Foxpro, T-SQL, and many other languages.
It’s still fun.
The prefixes “cis” and “trans” are from Latin: “this side of” and “the other side of”, they are opposites and have been used in chemistry for decades.