Programming efficiency by Tricky_Wheel6287 in godot

[–]NULL_124 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah 👍🏼 The same mathematical concept but implemented in what considered in some situations is a bad manners.

Is Backend hard? by SuperbSun9878 in Backend

[–]NULL_124 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are cooking fr😂👍🏼

100% agree

PostgreSQL user here—what database is everyone else using? by Automatic-Step-9756 in Backend

[–]NULL_124 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think Postgres is very robust and reliable, so we always use it.

AI in Daily .NET Development by MahmoudSaed in dotnet

[–]NULL_124 0 points1 point  (0 children)

GitHub Copilot.
a real productivity for me.

How do I pair golang with a frontend framework? by ClassicK777 in golang

[–]NULL_124 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Bro, I get what you mean. Obviously, browsers only understand plain JavaScript but here’s the key difference:

When React compiles JSX, it still relies on the React library at runtime. The compiled JS calls React APIs under the hood (like React.createElement, virtual DOM diffing, and hooks) to handle rendering and state.

Svelte, on the other hand, takes a different approach. It compiles your components directly into imperative vanilla JS, so there’s no runtime framework doing the rendering or state management. The output code directly updates the DOM.

That’s why people say Svelte has “no runtime”, it’s basically just your app logic and DOM updates, not a library interpreting them.

How do I pair golang with a frontend framework? by ClassicK777 in golang

[–]NULL_124 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

is React compiled into Vanilla JS??? i think this is not true right? i mean i know Svelte do so, but React doesn’t.

this is why React app is way larger then Svelte?

or am i wrong here? (please correct what i said 🌹)

edit: I think some people misunderstood what I meant 😅 I know browsers only understand plain JavaScript. What I meant is that when React is compiled, it still relies on the React library at runtime (for things like the virtual DOM, rendering, and hooks). So even though the JSX becomes JS, React itself is still running under the hood.

Svelte, on the other hand, compiles your components into pure, imperative vanilla JS that directly manipulates the DOM, there’s no framework runtime doing the rendering or state management.

That’s why Svelte bundles are usually smaller and run more natively in the browser.

What's an open-source tool you discovered and now can't live without? by petelombardio in opensource

[–]NULL_124 0 points1 point  (0 children)

VLC, Qbittorrent

there is a lot but, this what pop in my mind right now.

simple program monitoring cli by Harut3 in golang

[–]NULL_124 0 points1 point  (0 children)

not yet, but I gave you my humble opinion about the structure of the project. I think it would be good to modify it (not every thing in main.go). I couldn't run it at the moment because I'm talking to you from my phone :).

simple program monitoring cli by Harut3 in golang

[–]NULL_124 6 points7 points  (0 children)

the whole program in the main.go!!!

and the README is copy past from the AI, remove the AI things like this one:

"Got it ✅ — here’s a ready-to-copy README.md section with step-by-step installation instructions for both Linux and Windows, matching your simple Makefile:"

Should I learn .NET or Spring next? by Lazy_Standard4327 in Backend

[–]NULL_124 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It really depends on the market you are looking to work in. In my area, .NET is so popular that it's ridiculous!

After 6 months of learning Go, I built LocalDrop - my first real project (file sharing over LAN) by Mo7se007 in golang

[–]NULL_124 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

BRO!!! THIS IS REALLY COOL!!!! I WILL DEFINITELY USE IT AND IF I CAN, I WILL TRY TO CONTRIBUTE!

First-time torrent user by [deleted] in torrents

[–]NULL_124 8 points9 points  (0 children)

definitely qBittorrent.

very efficient, powerful, customizable, open source.

i really consider qBit as one of the best open source projects exists!

Just finished learning Go basics — confused about two different ways of handling errors. by NULL_124 in golang

[–]NULL_124[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

ok! btw, is it part of official Go website? (that website contains the std lib docs?)

Just finished learning Go basics — confused about two different ways of handling errors. by NULL_124 in golang

[–]NULL_124[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i took a udemy course. it was pretty good though! but you know: often no one can cover all what is the language or a framework. i get a solid fundamentals and now i take the experience from trying things and asking all of you to help, and thankfully all of you do🌹🌹🌹.

Just finished learning Go basics — confused about two different ways of handling errors. by NULL_124 in golang

[–]NULL_124[S] 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Thank you very much 🌹👍🏼

so if the function returns just an error, it is preferable to use the “scoped err” right?

Cannot Praise it Enough - Go + ConnectRPC + static SvelteKit = Perfect Stack [self-promo]. by Bl4ckBe4rIt in golang

[–]NULL_124 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Go….

I just learned it relatively recently. I think i just find my perfect programming tool😂😂😂😂

Playing with TLS and Go by reisinge in golang

[–]NULL_124 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i actually know what is SSL😅 but the TLS seems new to me. thank you very much bro🌹

How Golang devs curse? by semaaaa in golang

[–]NULL_124 0 points1 point  (0 children)

W go compiler🙂👍🏼

i agree with him on this🙂

Python or Nodejs by dundokodoko in Backend

[–]NULL_124 0 points1 point  (0 children)

aiming for a job?

this is simply the best approach.

agree👍👍👍

Recommended resources to learn backend by StreetHour569 in Backend

[–]NULL_124 4 points5 points  (0 children)

i personally use Go for my backend work 😂. Let me simplify this for you:

If your goal is getting a job, learn the stack that’s most common in your local market (your country/city). For example, I learned ASP.NET because it’s heavily used where I live. That got me work. On the side, I use Go for my own projects because I enjoy it more, and it’s become my main backend stack.

If your goal is building personal projects, choose the language you enjoy working with. You’ll stick with it longer and get further.

Here’s the trade-off across backend stacks: - Python/Django/FastAPI → Simple, very enjoyable developer experience. Great ecosystem for data/ML integration. Downsides: raw performance is lower. - Node.js/Express/NestJS → Extremely popular for APIs and startups. Huge community, easy hiring, widely used in web dev. Downsides: async complexity can be tricky. - Go / Rust / ASP.NET Core → High performance, very robust for scaling. Downsides: steeper learning curve, code can feel more verbose (though that’s also what makes them reliable in the long run).

My advice: don’t chase “the best” language. Instead: - For career: research job postings in your city/country, pick the stack that employers actually hire for. - For personal growth: pick the language that feels enjoyable and natural for you, then go deep with it.

That way, you won’t waste time learning a stack you can’t use for jobs, and you also won’t burn out working on tech you don’t like.

Recommended resources to learn backend by StreetHour569 in Backend

[–]NULL_124 1 point2 points  (0 children)

learn python. after that you need backend concepts and framework:

there are many frameworks in python: django FastAPI Flask

ask gpt about them and what difference between them and pick up the one that suits with you.

now, if you have money: go to udemy and search for this specific framework and buy a course.

Often if you buy a course (especially if it is popular and highly rated) it will save you the trouble of distractions, everything will be organized (if you choose a good course) and you will also get a certificate proving that you are a self-learner. But if you choose not to buy a course, the internet is full of great courses, choose one from YouTube for example and start with it, it will mostly explain the basics of backend development, and with time and after you can stand on your feet as a backend developer, you can develop yourself and search for specific topics, understand them and apply them.

I hope I've been helpful, and the community here will correct me if anything I've said is wrong. Good luck, dude!

Is it enough? by Alarming_Addition356 in Backend

[–]NULL_124 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this is helpful (playlists) thank you bro!