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2017-04-28
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Bore da people
And good morning to you, Chris 👋
I had to write C this morning 😱 https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/364/allow-setuid-on-shell-scripts
I think I've only written 2 lines of C in 39 years of programming! Never had the need.
Had a friend share this on another slack group: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HhNIttd87xs
yogidevbear: I think I've seen that talk before. As a programmer for 39 years (29 years professionally) a lot of that resonates. BTW my first code (in BASIC) was on a PDP-8 which was 25 miles away from my school in a technical college and I was on a teletype using an acoustic coupler to communicate down a phone line.
At the time a personal computer cost about £700-800 (about £2800-3200 in current terms) so no chance of owning one!
I'm busy watching the part where he's highlighted how the architecture of something should scream the intent, as opposed to the I/O channel details and he's elaborating on how this principle would be applied to software architecture showing it's intent/purpose by looking at it (as opposed to showing the method / I/O channel from looking at it)
It's a very interesting talk
I find Uncle Bob an annoying speaker and don't always agree with him. This one is not too bad tho.
Most of this stuff was just std design principles when I was in Uni (although we didn't use use cases we used something similar and we modelled using other diagrams as we were mainly writing in procedural code - COBOL)
Mornings…
rcfotd:
-------------------------
clojure.core/error-handler
([a])
Returns the error-handler of agent a, or nil if there is none.
See set-error-handler!
That's one in the group agent-error, set-error-handler!, error-handler, error-mode and set-error-mode!
that you rarely hear of. More in general, there's so much wisdom in Clojure concurrency models (STM at the top) that very few are making a good use of. Yeah, core-async kind of contributed (positively) to that.
at some point i lost the will to live, and my diligence may have become slightly impaired
Well as long as it's "due"