And also for the entire Dominion war we forget that half the federation, the Klingons, and the romulans are all in the beta quadrant. But we’re fighting to save the alpha quadrant.
And also for the entire Dominion war we forget that half the federation, the Klingons, and the romulans are all in the beta quadrant. But we’re fighting to save the alpha quadrant.
I believe there’s one directly off the bridge, near the door to the conference room.
If you’ve ever followed the C++ committee discussions you’ll see they put a lot of time and effort into considering legacy code when introducing language changes. For better or worse existing languages are on a trajectory set from their inception that can’t always be easily redirected. New languages are free of this baggage and can wildly experiment.
If your org is all Windows there’s not really an easier way to make Windows desktop applications than c# and .NET with winforms. If a team is making any internal tools for Windows users there’s a good chance that’s what they’ll be using.
Between this and the lower decks supplement August is looking like a pretty good month for this game.
And none of them were content…
I was mostly thinking about PHP with that comment. Which has some serious issues with how modules from other files are included and general structure. It’s possible to write well organized PHP projects but it takes discipline, it doesn’t happen organically, and its really hard to fix once the project has grown significantly.
I haven’t used VB since VB.NET
2003 so I hesitate to speak on that directly. Professionally I work across multiple OS’s and architectures so all .NET languages are kinda no-go’s. That’s where C++ really shines.
First, of course, use whatever you’re comfortable with.
Second, a lot of that advice you see is about long-term development on large projects. Often you don’t know if a little side project is going to turn into something huge but it’d be nice to have started it in something that will be more easily maintainable down the line.
Start applying. Apply everywhere, experienced full stack devs are still in demand. Don’t negotiate with a tiny company that can’t even give you full time hours.
Awesome list, I didn’t know where dndnext had gone.
I picked up Outfoxed! a few weeks ago to play with a relative, it comes highly recommend as a cooperative who-dun-it.
I haven’t gotten a chance to play it yet so I can’t speak to the actual gameplay.
Exploding Kittens is always a winner when I break it out.
I would also echo the Crew is great, especially for people that are familiar with traditional card games.
I’d highly recommend adding a license file. Right now it’s more source available than open source.