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In this episode, we talk about creating languages with Edaqa Mortoray, puzzle designer at Edaqa’s Room and creator of the Leaf programming language, and Sam Scott, co-founder and CTO of Oso, which is powered by the language they created called Polar. Show Notes DevNews (sponsor) CodeNewbie (sponsor) RudderStack (sponsor) Cockroach Labs (sponsor) Cloudways (sponsor) Edaqa's Room Sadly, I must say goodbye to Leaf (my programming language) Oso Polar Rust TypeScript Python C++ Domain-specific language PHP Swift HCL Erlang
Edaqa gives an update on his coding interview website, and markup language, Stephane plays captive audience, and we discuss the intricacies of becoming an affiliate generally (and Udemy specifically).
Stephane goes on a mission in Nicosia, Edaqa tumbles bitcoin, and we talk about bitcoin wallets privacy
Edaqa Mortoray grew up programming. From interface design to scientific simulations, including video games and development products, he has coded a bit of everything. He is the author of the book “What is Programming?” and he runs a successful programming blog and a podcast. We talk with Edaqa about why every member of software development team should know who their user is and what their needs are. He then shares with us some good practices for defensive coding in this age of global users. When you are done with the episode, and if you want to hear more about the user-focused software design, make sure to watch Edaqa’s class on Skillshare.
TestTalks | Automation Awesomeness | Helping YOU Succeed with Test Automation
Have you ever wondered what is programming really is, at a deeper level than the obvious answer? That’s what we’ll be test talking about today with Edaqa Mortoray, author of the new book What is programming? A Harmony of People, Code that runs the world, and the Individual behind the Keyboard. If you’ll remember from a previous TestTalks episode, Edaqa is the inventor of the Leaf programming language, so he knows a thing or two about programming. Don’t miss it
Edaqa starts his own markdown processor, Stephane coinjoins and gets a polyo shot, and we talk about carb intake
Stephane finally gets some bitcoins, Edaqa starts promoting his book on podcasts, and we ponder: do we need a mailing list?
Edaqa's book launches, Stephane's ring arrives, and we ponder: what did Eagleson really mean back in 1991?
Edaqa reaches a first book milestone, Stephane gives a bitcoin privacy update, and we ponder: is a 'good enough' programming philosophy like poetry?
Stephane's adventures in buying bitcoins anonymously, Edaqa's impressions on the 'Mindset' book, and we ponder: what defect handling habit distinguishes the novice from the expert?
Edaqa explains pure functions, Stephane groks pure functions, and we ponder: can a function be all you need?
Edaqa boldly strides into the future, Stephane rocks Berlin (and not much else), and we ponder: what's the OOP version of spaghetti code?
Edaqa clears is inbox and writes a lot, Stephane buys a hardware bitcoin wallet, and we ponder: what are our go-to languages for now and the coming couple years?
Stephane writes the first post on his privacy-related blog, Edaqa registered a domain for his cooking website, and we ponder: how to split a day's work between personal and paid projects?
Edaqa yearns for easier local python packaging and adds a new page to his hugo powered website, Stephane create a couple wordpress websites using an affiliate network platform, and we ponder: why use javascript for Martin Fowler's 2nd edition of 'Refactoring'?
Stephane gets an insulin prescription, Edaqa does not like emptying his physical inbox in the evening, and we ponder: how big a timebox should you have to make a dent in your personal projects?
Edaqa picks a tweet, Stephane's fsharp exercism pull request gets accepted, and we ponder the meaning of a @codewisdom tweet about starting coding early in a project
Edaqa and Stephane discuss options for monetizing fruits & nuts bar recipes, Stephane fixes his redirect bug for real this time, and we ponder: how much glucose does the body need?
Edaqa makes the introduction, Stephane doubts his redirect fix, and the show gets its own shiny logo
Edaqa wants the ultimate Markdown parser. Stephane uncovers a bug.
Stephane destroys a website while Edaqa creates a new one. Featuring Edaqa's much better microphone.
Status update on the ongoing mvp from Stephane and Edaqa's blogging activity. This also goes into breaking a finger, considering data privacy from the start, getting in and out of the low spirit zone, and meetups.