並び順

ブックマーク数

期間指定

  • から
  • まで

1 - 16 件 / 16件

新着順 人気順

sql developer comment out lineの検索結果1 - 16 件 / 16件

  • 関数名、メソッド名、変数名でよく使う英単語のまとめ

    プログラミングをしていると関数名、メソッド名、変数名をどうするか悩みます。 ロジックより命名に時間を費やすこともざらにあります。翻訳したり、一般的な命名規則なのかいつも検索して大変です。 よく使うサイトの内容をコピってメモしておく 関数名とメソッド名の違いについて よく使う英単語のまえに、いつもごっちゃにして使っているけど、定義はこんな感じ 「関数」と「メソッド」の違い 似ているところ どちらも何か(引数)を入れると処理をして何か(戻り値)を返してくれます。 違うところ やってること自体は大差ありません。概念としては違います。 メソッドはオブジェクト指向で登場する用語で、オブジェクトの動作を定義したものです。 まずオブジェクトありきなのですね。一方の関数は、オブジェクト云々は関係ありません。 個人的な使い分け Java で登場する関数は「メソッド」です。C 言語で登場する関数は「関数」と呼

      関数名、メソッド名、変数名でよく使う英単語のまとめ
    • Lesser Known PostgreSQL Features

      In 2006 Microsoft conducted a customer survey to find what new features users want in new versions of Microsoft Office. To their surprise, more than 90% of what users asked for already existed, they just didn't know about it. To address the "discoverability" issue, they came up with the "Ribbon UI" that we know from Microsoft Office products today. Office is not unique in this sense. Most of us ar

        Lesser Known PostgreSQL Features
      • Local-first software: You own your data, in spite of the cloud

        Cloud apps like Google Docs and Trello are popular because they enable real-time collaboration with colleagues, and they make it easy for us to access our work from all of our devices. However, by centralizing data storage on servers, cloud apps also take away ownership and agency from users. If a service shuts down, the software stops functioning, and data created with that software is lost. In t

        • The Junior Developer Extinction: We’re All Building the Next Programming Dark Age

          “I have not failed. I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work.” — Thomas Edison Though to be fair, Edison never had to explain to his manager why the AI-generated light bulb stopped working, and nobody on the team understood the filament design. Picture this scene, familiar to anyone who’s conducted code reviews in the past year: A junior developer presents their pull request with the quiet conf

            The Junior Developer Extinction: We’re All Building the Next Programming Dark Age
          • Making static sites dynamic with Cloudflare D1

            There are many ways to store data in your applications. For example, in Cloudflare Workers applications, we have Workers KV for key-value storage and Durable Objects for real-time, coordinated storage without compromising on consistency. Outside the Cloudflare ecosystem, you can also plug in other tools like NoSQL and graph databases. But sometimes, you want SQL. Indexes allow us to retrieve data

              Making static sites dynamic with Cloudflare D1
            • Faster debugging with traces and logs together | Google Cloud Blog

              Enabling SRE best practices: new contextual traces in Cloud Logging The need for relevant and contextual telemetry data to support online services has grown in the last decade as businesses undergo digital transformation. These data are typically the difference between proactively remediating application performance issues or costly service downtime. Distributed tracing is a key capability for imp

                Faster debugging with traces and logs together | Google Cloud Blog
              • What's New In DevTools (Chrome 101)  |  Blog  |  Chrome for Developers

                Import and export recorded user flows as a JSON file The Recorder panel now supports importing and exporting user flow recordings as a JSON file. This addition makes it easier to share user flows and can be useful for bug reporting. For example, download this JSON file. You can import it with the import button and replay the user flow. Apart from that, you can export the recording as well. After r

                • Cognitive load is what matters

                  The logo image was taken from Reddit. It is a living document, last update: May 2025. Your contributions are welcome! Introduction There are so many buzzwords and best practices out there, but most of them have failed. We need something more fundamental, something that can't be wrong. Sometimes we feel confusion going through the code. Confusion costs time and money. Confusion is caused by high co

                    Cognitive load is what matters
                  • Memory Safety is a Red Herring

                    Memory Safety is a Red Herring Dec 21, 2023 TL;DR: I think that a focus on memory safe languages (MSLs) versus non memory-safe languages is a bit of a red herring. The actual distinction is slightly bigger than that: languages which have defined behavior by default, with a superset where undefined behavior is possible, vs languages which allow for undefined behavior anywhere in your program. Memor

                    • GitHub - taishi-i/awesome-ChatGPT-repositories: A curated list of resources dedicated to open source GitHub repositories related to ChatGPT and OpenAI API

                      awesome-chatgpt-api - Curated list of apps and tools that not only use the new ChatGPT API, but also allow users to configure their own API keys, enabling free and on-demand usage of their own quota. awesome-chatgpt-prompts - This repo includes ChatGPT prompt curation to use ChatGPT better. awesome-chatgpt - Curated list of awesome tools, demos, docs for ChatGPT and GPT-3 awesome-totally-open-chat

                        GitHub - taishi-i/awesome-ChatGPT-repositories: A curated list of resources dedicated to open source GitHub repositories related to ChatGPT and OpenAI API
                      • Cognitive load is what matters

                        Last document update: October 2025. The logo image was taken from Reddit. This is a short version of the text. Toggle the switch to see a longer version. Prompt | Chinese | Japanese | Spanish | Korean | Turkish Introduction There are so many buzzwords and best practices out there, but most of them have failed. They failed because they were imagined, not real. These ideas were based on aesthetics a

                          Cognitive load is what matters
                        • June 2025 (version 1.102)

                          Release date: July 9, 2025 Update 1.102.1: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.102.2: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.102.3: The update addresses these issues. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the June 2025 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some

                            June 2025 (version 1.102)
                          • Lil: A Scripting Language

                            Lil: A Scripting LanguageLil is part of the technology that powers Decker, a multimedia creative tool inspired by HyperCard. Decker uses Lil for adding custom behavior to decks and the widgets within. Lil is designed to be learned in layers, but it is a richly multi-paradigm language which incorporates ideas from imperative, functional, declarative, and vector-oriented languages. on mode a do # li

                            • crawshaw - 2025-06-08

                              How I program with Agents 2025-06-08 This is the second part of my ongoing self-education in how to adapt my programming experience to a world with computers that talk. The first part, How I program with LLMs, covered ways LLMs can be adapted into our existing tools (basically, autocomplete) and how careful prompting can replace traditional web search. Now I want to talk about the harder, and more

                              • Sketch of a Post-ORM

                                I’ve been writing a lot of database access code as of late. It’s frustrating that in 2023, my choices are still to either write all of the boilerplate by hand, or hand all database access over to some inscrutable “agile” ORM that will become a crippling liability in the 2-3y timescale. This post is about how I want to use databases, from the perspective of an application server developer—not a DBA

                                  Sketch of a Post-ORM
                                • Django for Startup Founders: A better software architecture for SaaS startups and consumer apps

                                  In an ideal world, startups would be easy. We'd run our idea by some potential customers, build the product, and then immediately ride that sweet exponential growth curve off into early retirement. Of course it doesn't actually work like that. Not even a little. In real life, even startups that go on to become billion-dollar companies typically go through phases like: Having little or no growth fo

                                  1