I too am a Vim user learning Clojure. I am trying to use Cursive since I often use IntelliJ. I suspect the concept of structural editing will be powerful, but for now it's still an awkward process for me.
That's an interesting point about depending too heavily on a debugger. I haven't run into anyone too dependent on it, but I could see that happening.
To me, debuggers offer a tighter dev loop when there's something you're stuck on. They also let you 'grok' a call stack in an unfamiliar codebase. "Did this function get called?" "What's in this variable?" etc.
What granularity of profiling are you doing in prod?
How do people do stuff without debuggers? :D
Another way to develop would be through iterating within a Unit Test that you don't plan to keep around.
Uh, I set a breakpoint and run the app?
To add a bit more context, it's more difficult to configure a debugger when the application is running within something like Docker. How difficult? That depends on the language and tools you're using.
I'm a heavy intellij user, but the git log UI always confuses me. When I open 'git log' via the action menu IntelliJ doesn't focus my current branch. I am not sure if there's some other menu I'm supposed to use to achieve that.
I do use the commit local changes, pull changes, merge branches functionality a good bit. My only feedback there is that I haven't found a way to quickly commit changes without running git hooks. Each time it requires me to open up the gear icon and deselect 'git hooks'. This is slower than using the command line where I can write git commit --no-verify
and repeat the same command again and again. I know it's a niche need, but it's necessary for testing a rather archaic system we maintain.
For my own projects I’m trying to build things I actually want. Tools for myself. But now the hard part becomes identifying a tool you wish you had, and scoping it down enough so that it’s appropriately sized for a new language. Tricky to approach the task from two ends.
If you aren’t familiar with dependency injection, that could prove a hurdle. Same for webflux/reactor. I would avoid using webflux until you feel more familiar with non-reactive spring. Otherwise it will feel overwhelming.
I feel this way about Hell Let Loose sometimes
I setup Anarch.is today. Feel free to create an account. Still need to write-up guidelines, enable community creation, etc. but it’s ready if you want to post/comment on other instances.
If we run into server load problems i’ll upgrade it. 😎
I think it mainly comes down to the project landing page being more friendly and the UI being more polished.
The landing page of join-lemmy.org doesn't show what the website looks like. The only screenshots are of code and github. That section is geared towards potential instance administrators, not potential users.
This was the first thing I noticed when I downloaded it today. (Actually, second: I appreciated out the username/password worked with my password manager)
Interesting article, I don't think I have a use for them though.