• affiliate@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    back in my day we only had one language. it was called ASSEMBLY. wanted to make the computer do something? you had to ask it yourself. and that worked JUST FINE

    • jaybone@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Well la-tee-da, fuck my AND gates and inverters.

      Look at moneybags over here with his instruction sets.

      • trashgirlfriend@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Back in my day when you wanted a computer to do something, you just asked her to do it and then underpaid her because women can’t hold real jobs.

      • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Gates and inverters!!?

        Luxury!

        In my day we had to use transitors and resistors and, if we were lucky, maybe capacitors.

      • Plopp@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Back in my day we had an abacus and if you wanted it to do something you had to do it your damn self. And that worked JUST FINE.

        • letsgo@lemm.ee
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          8 months ago

          Oh hello mister fancy pants with your abacus. We carved notches in rocks and we were happy with that.

        • SorryQuick@lemmy.ca
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          8 months ago

          Back in my day people worked 16h days everyday and had no time for math or computers. And that was JUST FINE.

  • pulaskiwasright
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    8 months ago

    My favorite is “Java is slow” said by someone advocating for a language that’s at least 10 times slower.

    • kaffiene@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      My favourite is “all the boilerplate” then they come up with go’s error checking where you repeat the same three lines after every function call so that 60% of your code is the same lines orlf error checking over and over

      • pulaskiwasright
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        8 months ago

        And god help you if you forget those 3 lines somewhere and you silently have database failures or something else.

        • kaffiene@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Yeah, that’s the other thing - it does become easier to accidentally fail to deal with errors and the go adherents say they do all of that verbose BS to make error handling more robust. I actually like go, but there’s so much BS with ignoring the pain points in the language.

      • xtapa@discuss.tchncs.de
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        8 months ago

        When you handle all your errs the same way, I’d say you’re doing something wrong. You can build some pretty strong err trace wrapping errs. I also think it’s more readable than the average try catch block.

        • kaffiene@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          You still need to add error handling to every call to every function that might raise an error

        • humbletightband@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          8 months ago

          I wouldn’t say so. They are inexperienced. They don’t know where the bottleneck of most of the modern software is (it’s io in 80-90% of cases) and how to optimize software without rewriting it to C++

      • SorryQuick@lemmy.ca
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        8 months ago

        How are they ignorant? It’s a known fact that java is slow, at least slower than some others. Sure, it’s still fast enough for 95% of use cases, but most code will run faster if written in, say, C. Will have 10x the amount of code and twice as many bugs though.

        • humbletightband@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          8 months ago

          Java is indeed slower than C, Rust, in some cases than Go.

          But that doesn’t mean that

          code will run faster if written in, say, C

          Again, like 80-90% of production code are bounded by disk/network io operations. You will gain performance from using C in embedded systems and in heavy calculations (games, trading, simulations) only.

          • SorryQuick@lemmy.ca
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            8 months ago

            Which is exaxtly what I said, that it’s fast enough for most use cases.

            In theory though, you will “gain performance” by rewriting it (well) in C for literally anything. Even if it’s disk/io, the actual time spent in your code will be lower, while the time spent in kernel mode will be just as long.

            For example, you are running a server which reads files and returns data based on said files. The act of reading the file won’t be much faster, but if written in C, your parsers and actual logic behind what to do with the file will be.

            But it’s as you said, this actual tiny performance gain isn’t worth it over development/resource cost most of the time.

        • xor@infosec.pub
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          8 months ago

          the jvm brings enough bugs to outweigh any benefits there…
          it is relatively fast, but it’s slow in that it takes up a bunch of resources that could be doing other things…

  • invertedspear@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    One project I worked on had 10 different languages. That was rough. But even your basic full stack web application is usually 5 languages: SQL, a backend language, HTML, CSS and JS. Usually some wheel reinventing frameworks thrown in for good measure. 5 languages is light these days.

    • CodeMonkey@programming.dev
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      8 months ago

      I work in Java, Golang, Python, with Helm, CircleCI, bash scripts, Makefiles, Terraform, and Terragrunt for testing and deployment. There are other teams handling the C++ and SQL (plus whatever dark magic QA uses).

      • mctoasterson@reddthat.com
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        8 months ago

        Probably a bunch of hacked together Python to copy stuff between fileshares. Bonus points if it runs with a .bat file and a Windows scheduled task.

      • swordsmanluke@programming.dev
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        8 months ago

        Kotlin is Java with all the suck taken out.

        It’s a modern, ergonomic language that runs on the JVM and removes as much GD boilerplate as it can.

        It’s fantastic.

              • moomoomoo309@programming.dev
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                8 months ago

                Cargo is really simple, which is great, but also limiting. Maven is much more complex, but for good reason - there’s use cases, especially around multi-artifact projects and version sharing, where cargo would require either some glue or you run into some interesting edge cases. Usually, Rust isn’t used for the kinds of big, wacky projects with a million dependencies that companies write in Java/Kotlin, so those kinds of use cases are considered more unusual.

                Gradle, in my opinion, makes itself complex because it’s all code, is very brittle, and several of its features just don’t work right and require workarounds. When it works, it builds fast and it works well, but getting it to work, and how often you have to get it to work again…not worth it.

          • swordsmanluke@programming.dev
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            8 months ago

            Lots of little quality of life things. For instance, in Kotlin types can be marked nullable or not. When you are passing a potential null into a non-nullable argument, the compiler raises an error.

            But if you had already checked earlier in scope whether or not the value was null, the compiler remembers that the value is guaranteed not to be null and won’t blow up.

            Same for other typechecks. Once you have asserted that a value is a given type, you don’t need to cast it everywhere else. The compiler will remember.

  • kaffiene@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Java is a great language. But programming languages are tools - not every tool is the right tool for every job

  • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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    8 months ago

    Seems reasonable to me. A scripting language, a compiled language, SQL, some CI/CD DSL, and a dealer’s choice.

    Java isn’t bad but, I’m not a fan of how verbose and convoluted it is. That said, I’ll take Java over here JS any day of the week.

  • Riskable@programming.dev
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    8 months ago

    I’m failing to see the problem. As long as one of the languages isn’t PHP they’re still probably better off 🤷

      • Restaldt@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        PHP5 was basically the Adolf Hitler of programming languages

        You know how something can be so terrible it ruins something forever? Like the hitler stache

        • msage@programming.dev
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          8 months ago

          5.3 was a big leap for PHP. It became actually very good at that point.

          I learned it when it was on 4 and boy oh boy was that something.

          But nowadays, with 8, it works great, tooling is fantastic. I just kinda wish the documentation, which is absolutely top notch for 90% of the language, was this good for the rest 10%.

          I want to play around with Fibers, but I just don’t get the info I want to.

          pthreads were so out of date in docs it was shameful.

          But the language is good, typing is coming along nicely, and basically the only thing I want PHP to do is to call Postgres and encode the output to json. Works like a charm.

          • Restaldt@lemm.ee
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            8 months ago

            Yeah i’ve heard good things about it recently. I’ve always liked how easy curl can be in php.

            Adding typing seems like it would fix most of the problems i did run into but

            Has PHP raised its standards on function naming? Or do you still have batshit situations like realEscapeString2() because the first 30 other functions for escaping strings are deprecated?

        • dezvous@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Lol okay maybe that’s true :) but PHP is great nowadays and with frameworks like Symfony and Larvel it’s easier than ever to build applications

      • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        8 months ago

        Both are fine tbh. Javascript has come a long way from a decade ago, and mixing in a decent framework like jquery does wonders.

        • brian@programming.dev
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          8 months ago

          decent framework

          jquery

          It’s current year, you have to choose one. there really isn’t any reason to use jquery other than legacy code

          • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            8 months ago

            Jquery is still extremely relevant. React exists as well, and is also a good framework. I just happened to think of jquery first.

            • brian@programming.dev
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              8 months ago

              what does jquery give you that vanilla js doesn’t? it was good before browser inconsistencies got ironed out and js didn’t have as many features built in, but nowadays I have no idea why someone would need it

        • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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          8 months ago

          The type system is still really bad, and apparently TypeScript gets mixed with native libraries in common practice, which makes a bad situation worse when something breaks.

          Edit: Messed up the name, fixed.

          • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            8 months ago

            The typing system is just a “quirk”. As long as you understand the (admittedly annoying) exceptions to the way your brain expects typing to work, everything works quite well.

            And tbh, transpiled TypeScript libraries can be called from JavaScript as if it was JavaScript… because it is JavaScript. There’s no need to worry about typing unless you’re doing something like passing a string into a function that expects an int, and you’d run into those same problems if the function was originally JavaScript.

            Edit: a word

            • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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              8 months ago

              I mean, sure, but taking that argument to it’s logical extreme we should still be programming in assembly, because you can if you just know enough to do it.

              A language is a tool. If it’s harder to use successfully than the next tool it’s a worse tool.

              • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                8 months ago

                No? How is that the logical conclusion? You need to understand any language, and any quirk of that language, in order to effectively write in it. JavaScript is powerful, and moving farther every iteration. Strong typing is just not something it takes into consideration. In the same way that C# doesn’t take white space into consideration, and python doesn’t terminate its instructions with semicolons.

                Each language is different, each language has its own quirks that you need to understand and get used to. If that wasn’t the case, we would have one objectively “perfect” programming language to use in all situations, on all machines, for every use case.

                • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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                  8 months ago

                  You need to understand any language, and any quirk of that language, in order to effectively write in it.

                  That seems to imply they all have the same amount of quirks, which I think most people here would agree is untrue

                  Something like Haskell has far, far fewer quirks than x86 assembly code. It really only has quirks to do with interactivity; everything else is very predictable and visible in the code. Meanwhile, assembly code is but a maximally useful set of quirks in a specific electronic circuit.

                  Ditto if you look at older languages. FORTRAN is unpleasantly quirky, which is why it’s almost obsolete.

                  If that wasn’t the case, we would have one objectively “perfect” programming language to use in all situations, on all machines, for every use case.

                  I mean, I hold out hope that that will eventually happen, at least for the vast majority of use cases and machines. Obviously we’re not there yet.

                  There have been languages that basically dominate their own niche. C/C++ was almost the only game in town for performance coding until someone discovered a way to compile mid-level code while also guaranteeing memory safety. Memory errors were a terrible quirk, so now Rust might steal its crown.

            • sacredfire@programming.dev
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              8 months ago

              I personally don’t think that’s the issue with the typing system. With vanilla js if I’m looking at a function that has say four parameters that are not trivial objects like strings but are actually complex (think dependency injection) it’s very difficult for me to know what these objects are other than reading through the code of the function.

              Actually, even if the parameters are simple, I’m not sure of that until I look into the function and see what it’s doing. This is a huge pain in the ass most the time, because I just wanna look at the function name its parameters and move on. However, that being said, most of this can be remedied with jsdocs and a good linter/lsp.

    • treechicken@lemmy.worldOP
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      8 months ago

      This is literally how this all started for us lol. Senior wanted to try to migrate everything to Kotlin in our project. Migration never finished. Now one of our major repos is just half Kotlin half Java. Devs on our team learn Kotlin by unexpectedly encountering it when they need to touch that code.

      • monsieur_hackerman@programming.dev
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        8 months ago

        Maybe it’s because I know both languages but is that really a big issue for people? The interop is great, and kotlin is very readable, so the cost of context switching between the two is miniscule.

        Some people have an extreme aversion to learning new things though. I feel that holding yourself to the standards and limits of your lowest performers isn’t a great thing.

      • masterspace@lemmy.ca
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        8 months ago

        Sounds like you’re making progress, your devs are slowly learning a better language that will let them work faster and will soon be able to help port the rest of the codebase and then you can really accelerate when no one needs to touch or know Java.

        • treechicken@lemmy.worldOP
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          8 months ago

          I really hope so. Last code I reviewed was full of !! and companion objects trying to emulate Java static instead of top-level consts. Even I’m still trying to figure out what idiomatic Kotlin looks like. We got a ways to go…

      • mstrk@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Doesn’t Kotlin has interoperability with Java? I didn’t used it much yet but I’m about to in a few months. Is it that difficult to just refactor things to Kotlin when you need to change something in the project? I’m asking because I just can’t work with verbose languages and would prefer Kotlin to Java everyday.

        • treechicken@lemmy.worldOP
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          8 months ago

          The interoperability is both a blessing and a curse imo since it let us half-ass the integration by leaving a bunch of Java code unconverted. I could start refactoring everything but then my team would stop reviewing my PRs due to the diff size (and then my manager would eventually find out that I’ve been using up work time doing this instead of shipping features during crunch week).

          I really much prefer Kotlin to Java. I just wish my team had actually had a commitment to it instead of just sorta using it with no migration plan.

    • force@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Just use Scala*** ((objectively better language¹))

      1. scala does not support breaking out of loops, it does errors on early returns, uses parentheses for array indexing, compiles extremely slowly, …
  • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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    8 months ago

    The python code we inherited had some performance issues. One of the guys was like “we should rewrite this in Java”.

    Luckily the boss was not an insane person and shut that down. The issue was an entirely stupid “…and then we do one query per project” behavior that worked fine when the company was small but unsurprisingly started to suck as users created more projects.

    Instead of a months long complete rewrite, we had a two hour “let’s add profiling… Oh wow that’s a lot of queries” session.

  • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    I would say that over a decade of my career was coming in as a freelancer to fix codebases where a couple of people tought they knew better than the previous ones and proceeded to add yet another very different block to a codebase already spaghetiffied by a couple such people.

    Sometimes it was coding style, sometimes it was software design, sometimes it was even a different language.

    I reckon thinking that just deploying one’s EliteZ skills on top of an existing code base without actually refactoring the whole thing will make it better is a phase we all go through when we’re still puppy-coders.

    • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      The majority of puppy-coders I’ve encountered (including myself) actually want to refactor rather than just add onto. They are fundamentally correct in this, but they don’t grasp that 1) few companies want to acknowledge that the code base which is their greatest tangible “asset” is actually complete shit, and 2) that due to their inexperience, their refactored replacement is probably going to end up as bad as or worse than the original.