• @[email protected]
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        159 months ago

        Yeah. Look at any dev job listing and it’s all “Python, C++, or Java experience preferred”

    • @[email protected]
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      429 months ago

      Perhaps as the new hotness to web devs, but Python was a mainstay in science way before Django.

    • @[email protected]
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      419 months ago

      For about the first five years of its life, it was eclipsed by Perl. That’s about it. I don’t think anything will ever unseat Python as too many people’s first and last language.

      • @[email protected]
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        109 months ago

        Surely not in the immediate future, but there will surely be a day when Python dies. Remember that BASIC filled that role for far too long.

        • @[email protected]
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          219 months ago

          BASIC was meant as a teaching language. Python is a real language that’s simple enough to be a teaching language. It also runs the same dialect on every machine, which BASIC never did.

          Being the second best language at everything, it gets used for everything because people don’t want to learn the first best in any given niche. Python isn’t the best choice for numeric applications, but with NumPy, it’s adequate, so why bother learning R? Even if you knew R already, you’re going to run into a lot of Python code for that domain from other people. You’ll be swimming against the current, and why bother?

          Python will die when the sun does.

            • @[email protected]
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              9 months ago

              I do know, but that’s off to the side of BASIC in general. In fact, VB syntax is barely recognizable as BASIC.

          • TechNom (nobody)
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            49 months ago

            Python is one of my primary languages (the other one being Rust). But it honestly isn’t the easiest language to teach - I’m saying this from experience. There are so many concepts at play - name binding, iterators, generators, exception chains, context managers, decorators, … . I could go on and on. Teaching becomes hard because any basic question could become a journey into the rabbit hole of python semantics.

            Python is, however, a good first language for self learners. (Note: teaching vs learning). Python behaves intuitively. It’s designed in such a way that if you guess something about the language, you’ll probably be right.

    • I Cast Fist
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      29 months ago

      Maybe when 3.0 was new and created all sorts of incompatibilities with 2.x

      • @[email protected]
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        179 months ago

        Nah, Python 2.7 got way more support than it ever deserved because people just refused to switch to 3. Hell, people were starting new python projects on 2 after 3 came out.

  • @[email protected]
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    1249 months ago

    Yesterday I would have argued that with the rails framework Ruby is a great way to rapidly develop a scalable application. Today I started having an intermittent failure in one of my API instances and when searching about it the only thing I could find was one obscure blogpost that boiled down to “yeah sometimes Ruby Ave active record just screws up the character set off a string” exact same string, different results. Excuse me Ruby? How the fuck can you sometimes screw up a character set? There should be no sometimes to any thing here.

    • frozen
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      889 months ago

      I like Ruby most of the time, but honestly, I’m not surprised at “sometimes” behavior from the language created by someone who, when asked for the formal definition of something in the language, said he’s “not really a formal kind of guy.”

    • @[email protected]
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      99 months ago

      Haven’t Spring Boot in Kotlin with jib and cloud integration caught upto this in terms of development speed?

    • @[email protected]
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      59 months ago

      I mean I’ve been using ActiveRecord for the last 20 ish years and I’ve never encountered or even heard of this bug. Sounds like you came across an especially obscure one.

    • @[email protected]
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      29 months ago

      I spent a few years with Ruby, and my experience is that Ruby and Rails couldn’t be more different in terms of programming approach, philosophy, and nature. I don’t trust Rails fully, but I do trust Ruby.

  • Oliver Lowe
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    979 months ago

    Mastodon is written in Ruby. Nowhere near as big as Facebook or the ML field, but hey, it’s important to a couple of us at least :)

    @programming @nifty

      • @[email protected]
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        9 months ago

        It probably wasn’t a big deal when it was a niche project until Twitter imploded. Then all the public instances got overloaded with new users and the limits became obvious.

        A better design is Lemmy which is written in Rust so it has far more scalability. It’s compiled and because it’s tokio / actix based, it can also do a lot more stuff asynchronously so it’s not spawning thousands of threads to cope with concurrent requests.

          • Oliver Lowe
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            59 months ago

            @towerful I mainly program in Go, so when I see all that extra software I notice how much easier it is when I get to just rely on the Go runtime. It does a lot of the heavy lifting done here, but the resulting code is not as clean. Actually just today I read through Mastodon’s code to track down a bug in my in-progress ActivityPub service (in Go) and found the Ruby really easy to navigate!

            @programmer_humor

  • @[email protected]
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    799 months ago

    As a Rails engineer with 14 years experience, I can say the place that should be in the 3rd panel is Shopify. They employ so many ruby and rails core committers and directly fund a good many rails gems, and ruby community infrastructure it’s insane. They’re also directly funding the development of things like the YJIT and speed enhancements to MRI itself.

    Then there’s all the other places I know or worked at built on Ruby where my other long tenured ruby friends work.

    • Gusto
    • Airbnb
    • Clearbit
    • Stripe
    • Github
    • Gitlab
    • Bold Penguin
    • @[email protected]
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      139 months ago

      Ruby was recommended to me by my comparative programming languages professor. I haven’t picked it up, but there were memes that this professor was so good at programming he was secretly built by the university in C++ to teach students how to write better code.

      • @[email protected]
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        39 months ago

        It’s worth learning Ruby to understand some of the tricks you can do in programming languages.

        Did your prof also recommend others like Lisp?

    • @[email protected]
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      109 months ago

      And it’s a pile of shit.

      git is great. GitHub blows chunks. The only reason it’s still big is that it sucks less than any other single platform.

      • Oliver Lowe
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        69 months ago

        @SpaceNoodle I’ll always be sad how GitHub helped popularise centralised workflows. Such an amazing opportunity for a big cultural shift, but it didn’t go anyway as far as it could have.

        @programmer_humor

        • TechNom (nobody)
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          29 months ago

          Git owes a lot of its popularity to github. Without it, there’s a good chance that mercurial would have taken over. In addition, the centralized workflow was what made both git and github popular. It simplified git usage enough to let a lot of novices get started.

          I’m in no way a fan of centralization that github represents. But I think a decentralized workflow using git was a lost opportunity. People complain a lot about the git-email workflow. But I see no reason why it couldn’t have become as easy as using github if the effort spent on github was spent on git-email tools and user experience.

  • @[email protected]
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    399 months ago

    the perl monks have hidden away the monastic order safely until they are needed to fight the ai demons

  • somas
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    9 months ago

    @nifty I have nothing against Ruby and think it’s a nice flexible language. At the peak of RoR though, all the asshats were all over Ruby.

    My problem with Ruby wasn’t even RoR, it was with the way the asshats valued creativity “cleverness” which seemed to mean writing code in the most cryptic ways possible. These folks took what should be an expressive language and wrote scripts that rivaled Perl’s worst “read once and never again” scripts.

    • @[email protected]
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      159 months ago

      I never did Rails but I used Ruby for many personal projects in the 2000s.

      When showing stuff to my coworkers or friends, I often joked how I tried to make my code look like it was already gzipped.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      This wasn’t “creativity over code” so much as it was the tail end of y2k and all the greybeards were canned so none could teach the shiny whiz kid how to code like an adult.

      Without the linus-like code review sessions, they never learned why and how to improve.

      Now their kludge-bro mentality has raised a whole new generation.

      And that’s why people don’t know not to flatpak or npm themselves into a solarwinds sploit.

  • @[email protected]
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    309 months ago

    RoR is too much magic for me. Getting started with any new code base is such a pain that I never want to do again. As a manager, I’ll avoid any job post that mentions Ruby. I have maintained projects written in Delphi, Centura, Java, C#, PHP and none of them even come close to the pain of RoR. Java and C# are notorious for ceremonial interfaces but that’s nothing compared to trying to figure out RoR automagics.

    • @[email protected]
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      69 months ago

      There is a lot of magic in Java. Try Spring Boot for example, and things magically connect together with annotations, or somehow methods get injected onto interface on the fly, or an http interface maps onto a function with parameters because the runtime is doing it. This is most evident when you set a break point in some class and there might be 4 or 5 mystery functions it passed through between it and where you thought it was calling from. Sl4j, Lombok, Hibernate are doing the same kind of thing.

    • @[email protected]
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      59 months ago

      Maybe in enterprises settings what you say makes sense, but for the small to medium startups I usually work for, RoR is great. It’s super easy to prototype and switch lanes. If I had to do what I do in Java I’d go insane. As for Delphi…

      The RoR “magic” being obtuse is extremely exaggerated most of the time and more meme than reality. If you think PHP is better, by which I guess you mean Laravel, how on earth is that less “magical”? React? Next? I’ll take Ruby any day.

      • I Cast Fist
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        69 months ago

        React can go fuck itself with a pineapple, fuck that piece of shit. Every project I’ve had to deal with that used React was an absurdly bloated mess because it imported fuckloads of React plugins and addons.

  • @[email protected]
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    309 months ago

    Hey Ruby debs, lookup Elixir. It’s supposedly similar syntax but run on the Erlang VM instead. Lots of cool companies use it, and a great community. 🤗

    • @[email protected]
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      149 months ago

      I’ve written a non-trivial amount of Elixir. It’s nice, but I wouldn’t say it’s like Ruby. It’s more heavily functional, and it wants you to work with data in an immutable way. If you’re coming from a language that doesn’t force immutability, then you’ll be miserable until you get your head around how to work that way.

      I really like it, though. Especially now that it’s getting optional typing.

    • @[email protected]
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      49 months ago

      Elixir is an awesome language. It takes some getting used to as it’s meant to be more functional like Haskell, but it plays really nicely with big parallel workloads and is super clean to write

    • ProdigalFrog
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      39 months ago

      Crystal lang is also pretty cool looking. It seems to be going for what Nim is doing, making Ruby as fast as C.

    • @[email protected]
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      29 months ago

      Don’t learn Elixir to replace Ruby. Learn it to enjoy OTP and BEAM.

      I would love to join a cool company that’s willing to accept a dev that can transition fast. However, most of Elixir job listings I find are gambling or crypto. And I ain’t gonna touch those.

    • geogle
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      109 months ago

      Physics changes with retirements. FORTRAN should received it’s gold watch and shown the door about 20 years ago now.

      • @[email protected]
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        79 months ago

        There’s no distinct generations of either physicists or codes that all retire at the same time

    • @[email protected]
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      59 months ago

      How long ago? ROOT (and other frameworks like GEANT) using C++ has been the standard for over 15 years, but probably longer. I think my advisor was of the last generation that had to write in Fortran.

      • @[email protected]
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        49 months ago

        Currently lmao. I’m using those tools as well but some specific event generators I’m using are in Fortran still

      • Codex
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        29 months ago

        the last generation to write FORTRAN

        runs to look out window

        My God is the sun turning into a red giant?!

        Oh no, whew, that’s a relief! Guess the FORTRAN programmers will be relevant for a little longer too then.

        (As a .NET dev, I wish some languages (or versions of languages) would die but i really think once code has been written it never goes away!)

        • Cosmic Cleric
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          19 months ago

          [COBOL has entered the chat.]

          Capitalism will never let a programming language die, if it’s still less expensive than an alternative.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      Yeah…

      Facebook hasn’t used PHP for a long time. They use Hack which started as a language similar to PHP, but it’s very different now - it’s strongly-typed and has a bunch of advanced features, like the ability to annotate functions as pure (no side effects), which gets enforced by the type checker.

    • @[email protected]
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      39 months ago

      Medicine too.

      An instrument in my lab is running jdk 1_8_131…and this is a recent/newish piece of equipment.

  • Phoenixz
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    229 months ago

    Is PHP becoming irrelevant? It still comprises the vast majority of web pages out there. Maybe that has been going down but with he amount of competing languages and systems out there, that is to be expected.

    Either way, it’s an awesome language, happily been using it for decades now

    • @[email protected]
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      159 months ago

      Either way, it’s an awesome language, happily been using it for decades now

      Mind taking a moment to share why you like it? I am not very familiar with it.

      • @[email protected]
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        129 months ago

        I’m not the one you asked, but what I like isn’t really about PHP itself, but the fact that I can get dirt cheap hosting with PHP and MySQL. Every time I want to create a small “app” that makes some manual task easier it’s very useful to create something I can access from the internet.

        Python is really useful for stuff like that too, but (in my experience) not as easy and cheap to use as an web app.

        For example I go to dinner with some friends every month and we always forget who’s turn it is to choose and book a restaurant. So I just made this PHP page that shows the current and next 2 months with a name. So we always use that to see who’s turn it is.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          I’m not the one you asked, but what I like isn’t really about PHP itself, but the fact that I can get dirt cheap hosting with PHP and MySQL.

          Oh, wow, I looked a little into this and hosting really is dirt cheap! That is a benefit that I genuinely was not expecting.

        • Phoenixz
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          19 months ago

          Though I like that you use PHP, I don’t think there is such a thing as PHP hosting, or python hosting? Maybe I’m not understanding what you’re saying here?

          • @[email protected]
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            19 months ago

            When you pay a company and they provide you with a domain (you choose) and give you a webserver, some disk space, a database etc.

            I pay about 30 euros a year for 5 websites. They are all very basic (either some php stuff I made, or WordPress). These websites have very few visitors so the hosting specs don’t really matter. All these websites have a specific domain name, some disk space, and a database.

            For this price they offer PHP and MySQL. So it’s not a dedicated server where I’m root and can Install other stuff.

      • @[email protected]
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        59 months ago

        … And it’s one of the languages everybody craps on. Like, I’ve seen people compare JavaScript favourably to it.

        • Phoenixz
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          29 months ago

          Yeah they do, with no real reason, really. Oohh, “some functions use underscore and others don’t!” And? It’s not a problem, really. Every language has baggage from the past and PHP kept it for stability, I’m happy with that.

          • @[email protected]
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            19 months ago

            “some functions use underscore and others don’t!”

            That’s weird, but more of an aesthetics issue than anything. JavaScript will actually decide to behave oddly for no reason; if that’s it it’s still king of the shitbirds.

      • Phoenixz
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        39 months ago

        Quite early on the eyes, powerful, fast to build and rolk out projects, about. A billion libraries with all the functions you’ll ever need. People both about it because it has some language quirks from way back in the beginning, I see it as stability. I don’t know how node is now but I remember a few years back where every bug fix came accompanied not only by 10 new bugs but also a bunch of interface changes that immediately broke everything. Every. Single. Damn. Time.

        Having said that, it under very active development and has been majorly improved over the years. Dumb design choices are no long available and right now it’s quite easy to work securely with it.

        Beyond the “but these two functions should have similar naming but they don’t!” argument, that with a good editor doesn’t matter anyway, there isn’t really a good argument out there not to use it.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      Depends on how you’re judging relevance.

      93% of webpages could be PHP because of Wordpress, but that doesn’t necessarily mean there’s a lot of PHP developers.

      • Phoenixz
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        19 months ago

        If that hypothetical 93% is WordPress, there’s still a huge demand for PHP developers to maintain that and the plugins and so

  • @[email protected]
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    229 months ago

    Rails: “No. Don’t worry Ruby.”
    Ruby: “Huh?”
    Rails: *Hugs Ruby
    Rails: “We’re becoming irrelevant.”

    Together forever!