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cover of episode 359: 7 Languages

359: 7 Languages

2019/5/28
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Coder Radio

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Wes is back and Mike's got a few surprises in store, including a new view on Electron, a hot take on titles, and a programming challenge for the both of them.

Plus when it's okay to lie to the compiler, what GitHub's Sponsors program means for open source, and your feedback.

Support Coder Radio)

Links:

  • Coder Radio 343: Say My Functional Name) — Mike breaks down the drama around nullable reference types in C# 8.0, and we debate what it means for the future of the language.

  • Coder Radio 358 Feedback) — In the discussion of Marzipan and Electron I think the answer is WKWebView, which just arrived in macOS 10.10.

  • Show Content Poll) — What Do You Want More of on #CoderRadio @CoderRadioShow this is your chance to give me some feedback for the next few months!

  • Why Computer Programmers Should Stop Calling Themselves Engineers) — The respectability of engineering, a feature built over many decades of closely controlled, education- and apprenticeship-oriented certification, becomes reinterpreted as a fast-and-loose commitment to craftwork as business.

  • About GitHub Sponsors) — Anyone with a GitHub account can sponsor anyone with a sponsored developer profile through a recurring monthly payment. You can choose from multiple sponsorship tiers, with monthly payment amounts and benefits that are set by the sponsored developer.

  • Lying to the compiler | Jon Skeet's coding blog) — I’m lying to the compiler to get it to stop it emitting a warning. The reason is that in the case where the value is null, it won’t matter that it’s null.

  • Programming Language Tourism | Bushido Codes) — I am attracted to this book precisely because it is impractical. You don’t gain mastery of any programming languages. Rather, you get the chance to explore and complete a series of coding katas to expand your mind about the art of programming.

  • Seven Languages in Seven Weeks: A Pragmatic Guide to Learning Programming Languages by Bruce A. Tate | The Pragmatic Bookshelf) — You should learn a programming language every year, as recommended by The Pragmatic Programmer. But if one per year is good, how about Seven Languages in Seven Weeks? In this book you’ll get a hands-on tour of Clojure, Haskell, Io, Prolog, Scala, Erlang, and Ruby.

  • Uno Platform) — The only platform for building native mobile, desktop and WebAssembly with C#, XAML from single codebase. Open source and professionally supported.

  • Uno.QuickStart) — This repository is a basic sample for an Uno application which cross-targets UWP, iOS, Android and WebAssembly.