In this episode Keith and Woody sit down with friend and traveling developer Corey Haines. Here’s a question, how many times have you written comments in your code? Probably a lot! In this show Corey gives some valid reasons why developers shouldn’t have comments in their code (with a few exceptions). The guys also discuss pair programming, what it is, how it is done, and the benefits of doing it.
Deep Fried Bytes Episode 35: Why Comments Are Evil and Pair Programming With Corey Haines
Tagged with podcast programming
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Deep Fried Bytes Episode 35: Why Comments Are Evil and Pair Programming With Corey Haines
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Deep Fried Bytes Episode 35: Why Comments Are Evil and Pair Programming With Corey Haines
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Rob Pike | Public Static Void
If you remember programming in C, you'll remember that it felt like music, or wine, or philosophy. Programming languages back then were laconic; they said all in just a few words. Today's mainstream programming languages, in contrast, are heavy, intricate and verbose. How did we get here and what comes next? Rob Pike, the co-creator of the Go programming language and a Distinguished Engineer at Google, thinks the solution is a language that gives us the best from both worlds.
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StackOverflow #59
"… This is the 59th episode of the StackOverflow podcast where Joel and Jeff sit down with Damien Katz (of CouchDB) to discuss non-conventional databases, non-conventional programming languages, and taking on non-conventional programming projects."http://itc.conversationsnetwork.org/shows/detail4150.html
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[Podcast] Episode #21: Programming roundtable (Part 2 of 3) - (37signals)
Part two of the roundtable talk with three members of the 37signals programming team — Jeffrey Hardy, Jamis Buck, and Jeremy Kemper. They answer questions from readers of SvN.
