Good... Dangerous.... See how even the writers of this article see in black in white.... I can believe handguns are dangerous and still believe they should be legal.
It's reasonable to look for reasons why Trump won but this is really stretching it all.
People often care more about fighting against something they don't like than they do about being 'right'. If the author needs a scientific study to tell her that maybe she's a little out of touch herself...
Wow this is cool. I always preferred Kotlin to Scala and have used it for Android dev. It was extremely easy to get it working compared to writing an app in Scala and the language was more similar with a modern syntax.
This project looks neat and if you had to use JVM tools but wanted some of the benefits of Erlang style development I could see it being a perfect fit.
My thoughts exactly. Title is misleading. If I have to click compile or hot reload it's not really a live editor. You can't change values and watch them update on the fly.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯ idk it's just a neat name. the env is more "live" than downloading the platform, setting up an editor and running the compiler and package manager from the terminal. i mean, is the name elm misleading because it's not a programming language for trees?
The fact that the Star Trek community is based on a united federation is really just a side part of the series. The main focus of the series is usually encounters with other species and how the crew comes together to solve puzzling problems. Star Trek is not a political statement... It just so happens that utilities like the replicator and the federation allow them to add to the setting of what a futuristic community might look like. Besides, on a a universal scale, the federation is a small group of the human species engaging in trade and communication with other species in a more capitalistic universe. Capitalism right now is for profit but in the future it could be for technology and knowledge.
In the long run that's not likely, because vim isn't nearly as extensible as emacs is; thus it's unlikely that the long tail of emacs functionality exposed by spacemacs will be duplicated in vim and those exposable by spacevim.
If you want an extensible editor, use emacs. If you want a vi-like extensible editor, use spacemacs (or just evil-mode on its own). If you want a lean editor, use vim. Torturing vim (and writing tortured code to torture vim) into a simulacrum of emacs just doesn't make sense to me.
It has a nice homepage and good examples but what would a language like this provide over something like Kotlin? Also, I had to dig down into the homepage to find out that it compiled down to JVM byte code.
Well, you could turn it around since Ceylon is older than Kotlin ;)
There's not a huge difference between the syntaxes, but IMHO Ceylon integrates better with the general JVM ecosystem. It has an excellent module system and works well with OSGi too. Ceylon + Vert.x is a powerful combo.
I think Ceylon is about a year older, so it's not much. Both arose out of dissatisfaction with Java 7 and below. Whether Java 8 has done enough to stem that, idk. IMHO, nice though they are, there's not enough in the other languages to justify changing ... yet. Javac must be one of the most battle-hardened, mission-critical bits of code in existence.
Start with elixir. The syntax is easy enough to learn. Once you get the hang of it learning erlang will be quite simple. You won't be a pro but you'll be able to look at a file and get the basic idea of what it does. Besides syntax they are very similar module-based languages.
It's reasonable to look for reasons why Trump won but this is really stretching it all.
People often care more about fighting against something they don't like than they do about being 'right'. If the author needs a scientific study to tell her that maybe she's a little out of touch herself...