|
You are here |
codewithstyle.info | ||
| | | | |
wittchen.io
|
|
| | | | | Recently, I had an opportunity to speak at the software development conference abroad for the first time. I visited Malmö in Sweden and gave a talk during the Øredev 2018 conference. The main theme of the conference was Deus Ex Machina, so I decided to adapt to this topic and prepared presentation about Brain-Computer Interfaces, which is my interest since the end of my studies at the Silesian University of Technology where I wrote a Master Thesis about similar topic. | |
| | | | |
typelevel.org
|
|
| | | | | Typelevel is an ecosystem of projects and a community of people united to foster an inclusive, welcoming, and safe environment around functional programming in Scala. | |
| | | | |
www.yesthatblog.com
|
|
| | | | | When I read this acting advice by Lauren Gunderson it dawned on me how powerful it would be if every tech conference speaker applied it to their talks. Change her word "scene" to "slide" (or section) and it mostly fits. | |
| | | | |
newdevsguide.com
|
|
| | | Over the weekend I discovered a new feature in Visual Studio 2022 for C# code. This feature, which I'm referring to as "Inline Diagnostics" allows you to see compiler warnings and errors in your editor window without needing to hover over the tooltips. | ||