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zackoverflow.dev | ||
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nurkiewicz.com
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| | | | | When choosing or learning a new programming language, type system should be your first question. How strict is that language when types don't really match? Will there be a conservative, slow and annoying compiler? Or maybe a fast feedback loop, often resulting in crashes at runtime? And also, is the language runtime trusting you know what you are doing, even if you don't? Or maybe it's babysitting you, making it hard to write fast, low-level code? Believe it or not, I just described static, dynamic, weak and strong typing. | |
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aradaelli.com
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| | | | | [AI summary] The author discusses their experience with the programming language D, highlighting its features, advantages over C/C++, and reasons for preferring it despite its niche status. | |
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qsantos.fr
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| | | | | This article will quickly explain the Rust types [T; N], &[T; N], &[T], Vec, &Vec with C code, and what the str, &str, String, OsString and CString add. Arrays and Slices Rust C [T; N] (array)Example: [i32; 100]Allocated on the stack T[N]Example: int[100]Allocated on the stack &[T; N] (array reference)Example: &[i32; 100]N is tracked at ... Continue reading Rust Strings for C Programmers ? | |
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yoheinakajima.com
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| | | [AI summary] The article discusses the current state and future potential of autonomous agents, categorizing them into hand-crafted, specialized, and general types, and explores their applications, challenges, and market trends. | ||