Programming: Rust, 7 Programming Languages Your Developers Need to Know and Python Aplenty
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Bootstrapping Rust
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This Week in Rust 264
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Nick Fitzgerald: Rust 2019: Think Bigger
Rust shines when we find ways to have our cake and eat it too: memory safety without runtime garbage collection, abstraction without overhead, threading without data races. We must find new ways to continue this tradition for Rust 2019 and beyond.
On a day-to-day basis, I am dedicated to small, incremental progress. If a pull request is an improvement over the status quo, merge it now! Don’t wait for the pull request to be perfectly pristine or the feature to be 100% complete. Each day we drag reality inch by inch towards the ideal.
However, when planning on the scale of years, our vision must not be weighed down by discussion of incremental improvements: we must rise and collectively define the lofty ideals we aim for. It requires avoiding local maxima. Nick Cameron’s Rust in 2022 post, where he starts with what we might want in a Rust 2022 edition and then works backwards from there, is a great example.
With that out of the way, I will make a couple suggestions for the Rust 2019 roadmap. I will leave my thoughts for the Rust and WebAssembly domain working group’s 2019 roadmap for a future post.
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7 Programming Languages Your Developers Need to Know
At the heart of dev work, you’ll see a team of developers who utilize critical thinking, creative approaches, and technical know-how in designing products that can bring your company closer to its end-goals. Thus, it’s crucial that you have a team of developers who are dedicated to updating their skill sets based on current trends, tools, and technologies. That said, here’s a list of programming languages that your developers need to know, so they can stay ahead of the learning curve.
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PyCoder’s Weekly: Issue #346 (Dec. 11, 2018)
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PyConZA 2018 – a beautiful community in South Africa
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RQuantLib 0.4.7: Now with corrected Windows library
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Reminder: Webinar this Thursday, “Automating Build, Test and Release Workflows with tox” with Oliver Bestwalter
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Recommendation: Dash for your docs
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PYthon Piedmont Triad User Group
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Python 3.7.2rc1 and 3.6.8rc1 now available for testing
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Matthew Palmer: Falsehoods Programmers Believe About Pagination
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Announcing libchirp
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Tell the user how many duplicate files have the python program deleted
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Open a text file then write the game level onto it with python
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PyCharm 2018.3.2 RC
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Remove duplicate files project is ready
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Writing better Spring applications using SpringFu
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The Beginner-Friendly Python Editor
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Fedora 29 : Using pytorch on Fedora distro.
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