PROGRAMMING


  If a programming language was a boat…

我是受最近的一个论坛帖子启发,他的想法至今仍让我感到奇特。Turing(图灵)Turing绝对是一个双人皮划艇(感谢评论里的提醒)。它很小。人力的。它通常被当作初学者的”船“。而且它非常的加拿大。Original photo by naokomcJavaJava...

4,686 0       PROGRAMMING C C# TURING


  What Makes A Great Programmer?

I remember it like it was yesterday. It was the year 2000, Dr. Pargas was standing at the front of our data structures class talking about some data structure-y topic while an SSH session was projected on the wall in front of us. Someone asked a question, and he said something along the lines of "Well, if you want to be a real computer scientist you need to start using vi". I think he was smiling as he said it, and in hindsight his statement wasn't even slightly true, but being young and easily influenced like I was I went back to my dorm room and immediately took up training myself how to use...

2,377 0       TIPS.PROGRAMMER GREAT GREAT PROGRAMMER


  Top 7 programmers bad habits

1.- The all code is crap, except mine, attitude.I have bad news for you buddy, all code is crap. No matter how much effort you put on it, there is always a majority of programmers who are going to think that your code sucks and that they could have done it 10 times better. I have already covered this topic in previous posts, you can find more information of what exactly I mean when I say that all the code is crap here and here.How to fix it: Don’t criticise others people code, it could be yours the one in the spotlight, try to make objective and professional observations instead, but do...

2,923 0       PROGRAMMING HABIT TIPS


  Solution to getKeyCode() returns 0 in Java

The getKeyChar method always returns a valid Unicode character or CHAR_UNDEFINED. Character input is reported by KEY_TYPED events: KEY_PRESSED and KEY_RELEASED events are not necessarily associated with character input. Therefore, the result of the getKeyChar method is guaranteed to be meaningful only for KEY_TYPED events.For key pressed and key released events, the getKeyCode method returns the event's keyCode. For key typed events, the getKeyCode method always returns VK_UNDEFINED....

10,813 0       JAVA KEYCODE 0 KEYLISTENER


  Can Your Programming Language Do This?

One day, you're browsing through your code, and you notice two big blocks that look almost exactly the same. In fact, they're exactly the same, except that one block refers to "Spaghetti" and one block refers to "Chocolate Moose." // A trivial example: alert("I'd like some Spaghetti!"); alert("I'd like some Chocolate Moose!");These examples happen to be in JavaScript, but even if you don't know JavaScript, you should be able to follow along.The repeated code looks wrong, of course, so you create a function: function SwedishChef( food ) { alert("I'd like some " + food ...

2,497 0       PROGRAMMING MAINTAINABILITY REUSABLE


  How Duff’s Device Works

I like C, but I have to admit that, sometimes, “The Old Man of Programming” can be a bit of a killjoy. This is one of the most exciting eras in computer history, but lately, C’s acting like he doesn’t evenwant to have a good time. While the cool kids like Ruby and Haskell are living it up, C’s over in the corner obsessing over bits and bytes and memory alignment and pointers and the stack and machine architecture and unreachable allocations and multiple indirections…and it’s…kind of a buzzkill. You want to tell him, “Dude! Lighten ...

2,404 1       DUFF DEVICE ALGORITHM SWITCH CASE


  9 quotes that stayed with me as a developer

I find quotes inspiring, motivating or sometimes just thought provoking, so here's some of my favourites from over the years. Sometimes reading a book can have a real influence on how you write code, or how you approach a problem. Sometimes a simple quote  is enough to make me question the way I look at the code I'm writing. Or often I sit in awe about someone's so well distilled what I've known internally for ages but have never been able to enunciate.   "Design is finding the problem, not the solution" -- Leslie Chicoine      "There...

2,405 0       PROGRAMMING PROGRAMMER QUOTE


  What do programmers really do?

Computers are useless. They can only give you answers. â€“ PicassoMany people (including my mother-in-law) think that computers are becoming so smart that programmers will be no longer needed in the near future. Other people think that programmers are geniuses who constantly solve sophisticated math puzzles in front of their monitors. Even many programmers don’t have clear idea what they do.In this post I want to provide some explanation to uninformed people what programmers really do:Programmers are translators of human ideas into the language of computers.They are a link bet...

2,294 0       PROGRAMMER WORK COMPUTER