Go's G/M/P Scheduler: A Human Time Scale That Exposes Its Raw Speed
Picture squeezing years into seconds. Go's G/M/P scheduler does just that — and this wild time scale proves why it's still crushing it after 15 years.
Picture squeezing years into seconds. Go's G/M/P scheduler does just that — and this wild time scale proves why it's still crushing it after 15 years.
You're knee-deep in a Go app, firing off HTTP requests that look synchronous but run async under the hood. That's Go's magic — and the confusion around sync/async/concurrent/parallel is why devs trip up.
Regex haters, listen up: it's not the patterns screwing you over. It's the damn strings you're feeding them. A Medium post flips the script with a killer Joda-Time parallel.
Imagine a variable that refuses to commit—not just to 0 or 1, but to any single type at all. QuBit's generic superposition turns code into quantum magic, and it's waking up developers to a wild new reality.
Forget GitHub stars. LangsCompare.site lets you rank programming languages on speed, memory, and more. But does it cut through the BS?
Picture this: your Java app crashes on a sneaky uninitialized field, hours into production. OpenJDK's latest JEP draft slams the door on that nightmare with strict field initialization.
Picture this: a no-diploma coder builds a compiler that laps C# at 1.26x — while skipping half its features. Is SMS the FSS killer app Silicon Valley forgot?
Ever wonder why your favorite game runs so smoothly, or why rockets don't crash? Blame — or thank — Bjarne Stroustrup. He didn't just invent C++; he rewired how we build the world.
Tired of spreadsheets for your nest egg? One coder's manifesto shows Python can model assets, liabilities, and market crashes to fast-track FIRE. But does it hold up under real-world pressure?
Staring at a compile error at 2 AM, one developer finally types 'farewell, Rust.' This breakup letter reveals Rust's cracks — and hints at AI's fix for tomorrow's code.
Rust HKT? Everyone's been holding their breath for it. Turns out, it's not just hard—it's impossible without gutting the language's soul.
Modern codebases reek of mediocrity. A viral blog nails it: no skill, no taste.