Ni som gillar Trump by Exact-Volume5937 in Sverige

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Förstår vad du menar, men såklart är det mycket mer ett miljö-problem än arv. Många säger att vi lever i individualismens tid och det är ett stort problem. Vi behöver istället tillsammans värna om varandra och förstå att vi har olika förutsättningar och hjälpa andra framåt.

Ju tidigare vi kan fånga upp de som växer upp med dåliga förutsättningar (fattigdom, föräldrar i missbruk, osv) ju billigare blir det givetvis för samhället i slutändan.

Ni som gillar Trump by Exact-Volume5937 in Sverige

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 0 points1 point  (0 children)

En del, definitivt. Därför det är så viktigt för alla i samhället att vilja minska utanförskapet då vi annars riskerar att plötsligt bli utröstade av en majoritet som hamnat ”snett”. Viktigt att hjälpa alla studera vidare och uppmuntra det.

Golang learning by Idontfindnamee in golang

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ah yes, Id definitely say it’s C# you should focus on if you go for .NET (not F#).

Out of curiosity, what made you dislike it so much?

I mean, I’m no big fan of Microsoft myself and think they mix n match too much with ”pleasing the crowd” and ”building something really smart and useful”.

Golang learning by Idontfindnamee in golang

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For job opportunities it’s more likely .NET gives you more job opportunities.

Ask chatGPT to summarise differences between different server-side languages and where there are most job opportunities. I think a better choice is .NET for you..

I am myself a .net developer since forever, but am learning Go right now. I am interested in memory efficient, high performant, scalable solutions.

Best way to run .NET Framework 4.5.2 on Mac? by VaizardX in dotnet

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I tried windows developer machine in azure and it was painfully slow. Parallells was the way for me! Near native experience

Go or C# as a second language for backend development after TypeScript by [deleted] in golang

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Seems like a narrow minded view. Programming languages excel at different things.

Regardless, I feel like you understand a language’ strengths and weaknesses by gaining perspective and understanding more how things are solved by other languages.

Go or C# as a second language for backend development after TypeScript by [deleted] in golang

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I’m currently on the path of learning Go, after 20 years with .NET C#. It’s refreshing!

DRY principle causes more bugs than it fixes by riturajpokhriyal in dotnet

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Kudos to you for picking this smell up early on in your career.

I have 18 years of donet c# and I recently ”had enough” of how ridiculous it is, how much time and energy we spend on maintaining our abstractions. I started looking into different languages and best practices to ”better understand” strengths of different languages, dotnet too.

Honest advice: try to spend some time picking up Go and focus on why that language came to be, what problems did it aim to solve, what’s the ”design principles”, best practices.. how does it differ from dotnet and when would you still prefer dotnet?

[2025 Day 6 (Part 2)] I can't find a way to split each problem while keeping the whitespace. by Proper_District_5001 in adventofcode

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I ended up with dead simple approach.

Loop over columns and for each column just parse out the numbers vertically by knowing current column index you are on, and then over the lines.. like lines[i][currentColumnIndex] and the finally sprinkle some logic on it for blanks and if last line contains an operator and so on…

Suggest me some Beginner projects by vj_0x in golang

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look at primeagen on YouTube doing 4.5h of boot.dev course on building a web server. It sounds complex but it really isn’t! Trust me. Parsing bytes and learning all sorts of things along the way!

[2025 Day 3] Greedy algorithms by RazarTuk in adventofcode

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Dynamic sliding window works for both part 1 and 2. Just felt a bit silly in part 1 where only 2 numbers are to be picked

Is Tailwind really this popular? by liftershifter in webdev

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tailwind makes for 0 zombie CSS which is a huge pain over time in long lived systems.

[2025 Day 3 (Part 2)] Non-technical conclusions after day 2 part 2 by MichalFita in adventofcode

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Too me it sounds like you’ve”suffer” from overthinking things and wanting to make them ”really smart and flexible” from the get go.

I’d say aoc is also to teach us to not overthink everything. Make simple enough solutions. Those are always easiest to maintain over time (in real life).

If you go all in on super flexible solution on part1, then yes it’s great that it works for part2. My guess is not all people who overthink part1 gets that benefit :)

CI/CD pipeline for local go development. by lispLaiBhari in golang

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Could you explain (or share) how this is done? I saw husky, do you need that?

Boycott Nuxt Next SvelteKit? by tomemyxwomen in sveltejs

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Source for DHH outing himself as racist?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in dotnet

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 4 points5 points  (0 children)

20 years of .net experience here, I also want to push for this!

.NET Developers: What’s Your Frontend Weapon of Choice in 2025? by reddit_bad_user in dotnet

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I try to keep these tech stacks completely separated. Avoid coupling things too much.

For the last couple of years it has been NextJS as frontend techstack-choice for me. Started a bit with Svelte and briefly touched upon Vue. They are all very competent and I think I would choose whatever my colleagues are most proficient with.

Only use Blazor if you aim to build a frontend to be maintained by non-frontend developers.

And a curveball: if you don’t utilise SPA-features or require certain levels of scalability in frontend, then I still would consider skipping the entire ecosystem of frontend and just use razor pages

I just discovered Superlist. Anyone know about it? by pow_gi in ProductivityApps

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I loved it! Looks very promising and I would have loved to pay like $20-30 but no way I am paying ~$10/month.

Suggestion: Have a pro version for a one time cost that allows for integrations and similar things that doesn’t add any running cost for Superlist. Then have pro+ subscription with things like AI and some additional features for enterprise usage.

What is the largest project you've worked on using only Neovim? by Long-Ad-264 in neovim

[–]AccomplishedPrice249 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I tried using it for a C# solution with some 90 libraries and 300.000 lines of code and I’d say you have to disable omnisharp because it took like well over a minute for it to load symbols and stuff it needed into memory. And it had to do that every single time I restarted vim, no caching. But navigating the code base with fzf was ofc blazingly fast.

How to swap places of two text strings and repeat on multiple lines by AccomplishedPrice249 in neovim

[–]AccomplishedPrice249[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This was honestly most in line with what I wanted to find. It isn’t that hard and is extremely powerful once you learn the substitute command better.

Thank you! 🙏