style-team
Exercism - Scala Exercises
style-team | Exercism - Scala Exercises | |
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10 | 399 | |
450 | 7,269 | |
0.2% | 0.3% | |
5.4 | 3.5 | |
4 months ago | 3 months ago | |
Rust | ||
Apache License 2.0 | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
style-team
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Let else will finally be formatted by rustfmt soon
Cameron Stephen for writing up the let-else RFC, as well as the dozen or so people who interacted with the proposal (which as far as I can see includes all of the style team)
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My First experience creating a proc macro: Implementing a ternary operator
Lobby rust-lang/style-team for anything it doesn't address.
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Why Rust prevent CamelCase variables by default
No you need to read the formatting and general style guide https://github.com/rust-dev-tools/fmt-rfcs There's very good reasons that there are agreed upon style choices in the rust community and you're probably making a horrible mistake and inviting problems by not following them (yes, even if you usually use other languages with different style conventions).
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Announcing the Rust Style Team
Seems like you’re in the know, but linking the RFC on sorting derives for others who want it: https://github.com/rust-dev-tools/fmt-rfcs/issues/154. Closed because out of order can break things (which I also disagree with, but I guess I understand the safety side)
- The hardest program I've ever written
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What happened to this style guide
My guess is that rustfmt style is the default: https://github.com/rust-dev-tools/fmt-rfcs/blob/master/guide/guide.md although I agree having something on the official doc.rust-lang.org site seems preferable
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Trying to get from C++ to Rust but brace style leaves me cold.
Recomended reading: https://github.com/rust-dev-tools/fmt-rfcs/blob/master/guide/guide.md Black style for Python https://github.com/psf/black StandardJS https://standardjs.com/
- Best Websites Every Programmer Should Visit
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When in Rome be a Roman
For coding style, read Rust Style Guide, though you can just leave style tasks for Rustfmt.
Exercism - Scala Exercises
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Developing Proficiency in Multiple Programming Languages: Part 1 - My Story
When I got my first job as a junior software engineer, my team lead suggested I take a course by MIT, Introduction to Computer Science and Programming Using Python to improve my fundamental knowledge of computer science. The course duration was 9 weeks and I learned a lot of theory about programming and picked up Python syntax. I liked the course and especially the exercises that were presented there. At that time I also discovered an amazing website called Exercism. I thought since I became familiar with the Python syntax and knew how to build simple apps, maybe it would be nice to explore some AI-related stuff. But after playing around with it I realized AI is really not for me. I'm not into analyzing data and everything that goes with it. I was more of an engineering and problem-solving type of developer.
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5 Websites to Boost Your Coding and Master Algorithms 🚀
Exercism
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MDN Curriculum
Nice, this reminds me of Exercism, which I wish was more widely known since they seem to be good folks. (disclaimer, I donate to them)
https://exercism.org/
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Do 48 Programming Challenges in 2024 #48in24
Exercism, the free programming learning platform has initiated a challenge named: 48in24.
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I learned* 12 languages in 2023: a retrospective
Last year, Exercism put together the #12in23 challenge. The goal was to learn a new programming language each month throughout the year. I was one of 135 people who completed the challenge, and I learned a lot along the way!
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12in24 - One language a month
The list of languages contains every language on Exercism, excluding ones that I've used before, web languages, or ones that I can't download for some reason.
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Ask HN: Programming Courses for Experienced Coders?
You might like https://exercism.org/
Learning by doing, with the help of mentors. Excellent way to learn a next language (as you are already familiar with the programming concepts).
- Any programs or websites to practice programming?
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Best platform for coding & programming testing everyday to improve coding skills in various language?
Exercism is pretty good for beginners with some programming language, they are open source and worth contributing to.
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Best Codewars for practice which have reflection in Web-Dev job.
Exercism
What are some alternatives?
git-fem - change your `master` branch to `mistress`
Rustlings - :crab: Small exercises to get you used to reading and writing Rust code!
1000_Projects - :sunglasses: Mega List of practical projects that one can solve in any programming language!
codewars.com - Issue tracker for Codewars
opinionated-rust-template - A template for your next Rust project.
devops-exercises - Linux, Jenkins, AWS, SRE, Prometheus, Docker, Python, Ansible, Git, Kubernetes, Terraform, OpenStack, SQL, NoSQL, Azure, GCP, DNS, Elastic, Network, Virtualization. DevOps Interview Questions
free-programming-books - :books: Freely available programming books
Scala Exercises - The easy way to learn Scala.
terny - A simple, C-like, ternary operator for cleaner syntax.
Demos and Examples in Scala (Chinese) - scala、spark使用过程中,各种测试用例以及相关资料整理
black - The uncompromising Python code formatter
interviews - Everything you need to know to get the job.