Honestly, I did not find that particularly convincing. Lot of typos and leaps in logic. The point is probably kind of true?!?
Honestly, I did not find that particularly convincing. Lot of typos and leaps in logic. The point is probably kind of true?!?
Honestly, I did not find that particularly convincing. Lot of typos and leaps in logic. The point is probably kind of true?!?
XHTML was going to be so awesome. And then HTML 4 happened. :(
You ok? Looks like you just spaced out there for a solid minute
Corn syrup and water.
All I remember about vbscript was that array indexes started at 1.
I love typescript, especially for larger projects and libraries.
It’s missing a lot of things that people really care about (with good reason) like static typing. But I think a lot of dislike also comes from it being more of a functional programming language and not object oriented. I like it because it’s like scheme or lisp but with a C like syntax that I find easier to read. I also like that I can do dynamic stuff with websites. In some ways it’s the perfect scripting language for the web. Just as messy and unpredictable as html.
Yeah, true
I mean that is the first step. ¯_(ツ)_/¯ The next step is to start defining the types more strictly than any.
I like this question. Maybe Dionysus a god of ritual madness?
My company requires either a code demo of existing code or a take home coding challenge. We get way too many people that cannot write code to not put that gate in place. It’s not even too terribly difficult or rigorous. Mostly looking for basic understand of fundamental things like DI, caching, background operations, etc.
I work on marketing websites which are essentially disposable. So every 3 years you start over from scratch (in a new version of some CMS). So I don’t get to build super cool functionality much, but I do get to work with newer tech stack. (I still don’t need 99.99% of the js frameworks flavors of the week)
Also JavaScript
My goto travel games Sushi Go! Cockroach Poker