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www.jeremykun.com
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| | | | For those who aren't regular readers: as a followup to this post, there are four posts detailing the basic four methods of proof, with intentions to detail some more advanced proof techniques in the future. You can find them on this blog's primers page. Do you really want to get better at mathematics? Remember when you first learned how to program? I do. I spent two years experimenting with Java programs on my own in high school. | |
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trendless.tech
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| | | | This is a comparison of programming languages. The thrust of it is to give an approximation of the strengths and weaknesses of that language compared to other programming languages. It's worth noting that each "lang" has its "use case", so none of them are technically "bad", though many of them are awkward for doing specific [...]Read More... from Programming Languages, Anecdotally | |
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128bit.io
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| | | | In my last post, I said I was in Italy on vacation and you may be thinking to yourself (most likely not, but just go with it) "what high tech gizmos did he bring with him on his travels?" and I would happily reply "A book!", yes a paper book. Being a software developer, I have access to tons of technology, more so when it comes to paper book replacements but there is just something about a real book that makes reading and learning for me better than using a computer, tablet, or doohickey. | |
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www.softdevtube.com
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| | Computers are orders of magnitude faster than when most of us started programming and yet a lot of software runs much slower than it should. Nobody likes progress bars. Slow code provides for a horrible user experience, drains batteries faster, and increases our cloud bill. This session explores some of the reasons why software is |