@Ategon I know I’m in the stark minority, but I wish there wasn’t such a focus on video tutorials. I grew up going through text-based actionscript 3 tutorials and that’s still my preference a decade and a half later.
- 3 Posts
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Josh@talk.jleb.devto
Programming•One company found that too much JavaScript costs them $700,000 per year, per kilobyte.
3·3 years agoYou can get the benefits of fast page transitions no page reloads with turbo combined with a traditional server rendered stack.
@firelizzard It’s unreal to me. I can’t fathom arguing against debuggers.
Rubymine’s debugger alone makes it worth it for ruby development, let alone all the other features.
Crazy productivity booster.
A lot of the time I don’t even know where a post is coming from. They show up on my mastodon feed, I reply. I’ve clicked source links before and gone to completely new lemmy instances I never knew about.
Josh@talk.jleb.devto
Web Development•Google Domains shutting down, assets sold and being migrated to Squarespace
7·3 years ago@darth @Mustafaalbazy The only thing stopping me from migrating off of gmail is all of the websites and services that don’t let you change your email address
Josh@talk.jleb.devto
Web Development•Google Domains shutting down, assets sold and being migrated to Squarespace
2·3 years agoI don’t know if it’s better, but I use iwantmyname and porkbun for domains.
Neither of them have shutdown and sold to squarespace out of the blue, so that’s a plus.
@Ategon Ahh. Posts on lemmy come in on mastodon as a link to the post on lemmy, rather than the link you posted.
Thanks!
Josh@talk.jleb.devto
Programming.dev Meta•“Lemmy Explorer” a new website to explore Lemmy communities and instances
3·3 years ago@Ategon The communities tab of this site is crazy useful. Definitely fills the gap that was missing with lemmy.
@Ategon I always thought it was go-dot
They’ve been striking for a week now.



@nitefox @glad_cat
Pulling and at least trying to start the program when reviewing new hire code is fairly common for me. I don’t know what is, maybe a lack of experience, but I find newer programmers just assume their code works without trying it.
You should always try your code. I’ve probably sent back hundreds of PRs because they just won’t even run.
But I always send them back. They do learn, it just takes time.