Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | kfir's comments login

Daring tech stack!

(50%+ in php)


Boring tech stack!


There is nothing more enjoyable and fun than developing on a mature, boring tech stack. We might be able to keep web devs more than a year if the kneejerk choice wasn't React or Angular (Vue3 is a joy).


Who decides what is "boring"? Plenty of people have stuck with React for nearly a decade and components just as old continue to work in the latest version of React. Meanwhile, Vue 3 is such a breaking change from Vue 2 that people either abandon Vue altogether or chase bugs with the 2-to-3 bridge. Does that make React "boring and mature" compared to Vue 3? If not, why not?


only if you manage to go past npm install


Why do people pay 100-200% to use Algolia


Hey Julien!

Great to see that you finally released this ;)


Yep! Thank you


You probably want to post it on this thread as well - https://www.reddit.com/r/rails/comments/ekmtgu/anything_simi...


I believe this paper has an answer to your question - https://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=3487022


Thank you very much for the link.

I don't see an answer in there, though.

They use tagging (as described also here: https://tree-sitter.github.io/tree-sitter/code-navigation-sy...). From both docs I assume `tree-sitter tags` works out of box for any language that has a parser. (Since neither doc instructs to save a custom config for tag extraction query, I assume every language plugin provides tagging queries).


Are you familiar with swift playground? https://www.apple.com/swift/playgrounds/


I wasn't but this looks fun!


While I understand your point, your example is a tad flawed https://www.celebritynetworth.com/richest-businessmen/ceos/s...


You can get a taste here and decide if you want to go deeper or not - https://github.com/mattmight/advent-of-code-2022/tree/main/d...


merits != features


Apple better start catching up then, the EU is mandating a clash.



Does anyone know what, if any is, the relationship between this site and this book - https://www.manning.com/books/effective-go


No relation (other than both being about writing Go). This site's origin dates back to Go's release in 2009 [1].

[1] https://web.archive.org/web/20091113154825/http://golang.org...


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: