this post was submitted on 01 Jul 2023
12 points (100.0% liked)
Programming Languages
12 readers
1 users here now
Hello!
This is the current Lemmy equivalent of https://www.reddit.com/r/ProgrammingLanguages/.
The content and rules are the same here as they are over there. Taken directly from the /r/ProgrammingLanguages overview:
This community is dedicated to the theory, design and implementation of programming languages.
Be nice to each other. Flame wars and rants are not welcomed. Please also put some effort into your post.
This isn't the right place to ask questions such as "What language should I use for X", "what language should I learn", and "what's your favorite language". Such questions should be posted in /c/learn_programming or /c/programming.
This is the right place for posts like the following:
- "Check out this new language I've been working on!"
- "Here's a blog post on how I implemented static type checking into this compiler"
- "I want to write a compiler, where do I start?"
- "How does the Java compiler work? How does it handle forward declarations/imports/targeting multiple platforms/?"
- "How should I test my compiler? How are other compilers and interpreters like gcc, Java, and python tested?"
- "What are the pros/cons of ?"
- "Compare and contrast vs. "
- "Confused about the semantics of this language"
- "Proceedings from PLDI / OOPSLA / ICFP / "
See /r/ProgrammingLanguages for specific examples
Related online communities
- ProgLangDesign.net
- /r/ProgrammingLanguages Discord
- Lamdda the Ultimate
- Language Design Stack Exchange
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Internal development tool in Python. It creates a feature or hotfix branch based on a Jira in the chosen repo, accesses a couple of different internal sites to set and get corporate info, uses Terraform Cloud to build the required pipelines and infrastructure. Once everything is done, it updates the Jira ticket.
I've got the basics done, but I want to put a Textual terminal-based UI on top so it looks pretty for management demos. I also need to get to grips with proper classes and more advanced Python.
It's not too shabby and I'm proud of what this I've accomplished because I'm just an old sysadmin turned DevOps. I really wish I could code faster, I've always struggled to code. :(