Data Science
@programming.dev
Data Science
Randall Monroe has provided me with weekly nibbles of entertainment for nearly 2 decades. But this was inspired by his style, not created by him.
I bet this is directly related to ChatGPT
Disinvestment into Python, Flutter, and Dart is a clear signal that those tools are unimportant to Google. I won't be recommending that anyone use Dart or Flutter on new projects.
You want to talk about it?
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I’m just passing along the message. Communicate directly with the person responsible on Mastodon.
Tutorials are lessons that take the reader by the hand through a series of steps to complete a project of some kind. They are what your project needs in order to show a beginner that they can achieve something with it.
They are wholly learning-oriented, and specifically, they are oriented towards learning how rather than learning that.
How-to guides take the reader through the steps required to solve a real-world problem.
They are recipes, directions to achieve a specific end - for example: how to create a web form; how to plot a three-dimensional data-set; how to enable LDAP authentication.
They are wholly goal-oriented.
Reference guides are technical descriptions of the machinery and how to operate it.
Reference guides have one job only: to describe. They are code-determined, because ultimately that’s what they describe: key classes, functions, APIs, and so they should list things like functions, fields, attributes and methods, and set out how to use them.
Reference material is information-oriented.
Explanation, or discussions, clarify and illuminate a particular topic. They broaden the documentation’s coverage of a topic.
They are understanding-oriented.

tutorials and how-to guides are both concerned with describing practical steps
how-to guides and technical reference are both what we need when we are at work, coding
reference guides and explanation are both concerned with theoretical knowledge
tutorials and explanation are both most useful when we are studying, rather than actually working
I also did not create this.
"All punctuation will be considered but avoided where possible because street names and addresses, when stored in databases, must meet the standards set out in BS7666.
"This restricts the use of punctuation marks and special characters (e.g. apostrophes, hyphens and ampersands) to avoid potential problems when searching the databases as these characters have specific meanings in computer systems."
This seems like a dumb line of reasoning. The problem has never been the signs or punctuation in a database. It's that the people in charge don't even know what BS7666 even says.
Defining the status quo as non-political is a political stance to support the status quo.
Everything is political by definition.
Everyone can save time and just read your synopsis. These are billionaires backed by huge investment funds fighting over service fees.
It's better that you don't use resume driven decisions. Just do whatever you are interested in.
I try to be positive here on programming.dev but someone gave you an incredibly thoughtful reply and you returned the favor with absolute disrespect. I think the only positive outcome here would be for me to simply block you and encourage others to do the same.
I'm just passing along the message. Communicate directly with the person responsible on Mastodon.
I actually like this a lot. Why not make computer things easy for people using them? In environments where people send forms as non-editable .pdf files, this is great!
I’m just passing along the message. Communicate directly with the person responsible on Mastodon.
LLMs amplify biases by design, so this tracks.
FYI the person with enough money to donate $300,000 to a programming language foundation is the founder of HashiCorp.
Entirely depends on the project you want to build
thanks for using Leebra!
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