20 random bookmarks
Bookmarks and whatnot. Закладки и всякое.
Bookmarks and whatnot. Закладки и всякое.
Delegating behavior to objects rather than invoking utility methods leads to cleaner, more extensible, and properly encapsulated object-oriented design.
I used it to create the Betula logo.
A paper about the old NoteCards program. I printed it out on an office printer and read it, unlike most other papers I saved in this Betula.
Organizing data in notecards, linking them. Notecards are not scrollable. Fileboxes and Browsers, special notecards. They state the system is programmable, but no detailed description of programmability is given. Interface is not really detailed.
Overall, this paper is not enough. I shall look for more.
Felix on Vala, Zig, C++, Fortran, Ada, Scheme and Common Lisp.
Is this site running Feather Wiki? Seems so.
Aika is a repository of mine dedicated to Arvelie and Neralie utilities, in an effort to make these time systems more accessible.
Innovation tokens and whatnot.
Есть игуана с глазом на затылке! А это, оказывается, тема распространённая так-то. Называется теменной глаз.
esoteric videogame
Decode the control glyph and challenge strange entities in a short audiovisual composition / videogame hybrid.
Wanna play.
Overcoming limitations of text email.
Go bindings to the Lemmy API, automatically generated directly from Lemmy's source code using the generator in cmd/gen.
I both pity and admire beginner web coders of today. Unlike me, they've not been able to accumulate gradual knowledge of HTTP, HTML, REST, JavaScript, the DOM, CSS, AJAX, JSON, asynchronous execution and event driven object oriented programming over a period of decades. They haven't walked the long path from CGI scripts to modern server side tomfoolery via PHP, ASP and various MVC frameworks. They're just brutally thrust into a complex world of Gulp, Grunt, TypeScript, React Hooks and MobX-State-Tree and it's assumed they somehow already know about all that other stuff. Computer Science has moved into the frontend in earnest and yet it still seems as if many view "web development" as "making homepages", and that it's something you can learn over a period of weeks, not years.
In retrospect, web development has always been a bit of a struggle against the powers that be.
Some things that were pretty bad for quite a long time have gotten better. But, on the whole, I dare say it's much worse now than when I started. Much like how Commodore 64 programmers could keep a map of the entire computer in their head, a moderately competent developer could churn out an acceptable web site in a matter of weeks, understand every single aspect of it and get paid in the process. If I, a quarter century ago, had possessed the experience and knowledge I do now, the simplicity of those early web pages would've felt surreal. And yet, we apparently provided a service that was of some value to some people. A digital commodity, nothing more, nothing less. Actually useful software.
Some people pull feeds way too often. Sometimes they do not get what they want.
Many cool colors