diegomoura

@diegomouradev
8 Followers
99 Following
11 Posts
Learning #Rust by building a dog monitoring camera using #RaspberryPi and possibly #TensorFlow, while I pair-program with my friend, mentor and programmer extraordinaire Jamie Klassen.
Today a dev from a different team, casually told me how he uses chatGPT-generated scripts in production code.😱 I was gaged.
I'm only in chapter 4 of the #rustlang book, but I can see why Rust has been the most loved language among developers many years in a row. Just the book already indicates a dedication to making this the best programming language ever. One of the best pieces of documentation I have ever read. Congratulations to everyone involved in creating the #rustlangbook!
Very useful in understanding Ownership to know what's going on on my doodle below. But Rust abstract all this, moving around into a feature called references https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch04-02-references-and-borrowing.html#references-and-borrowing
References and Borrowing - The Rust Programming Language

Goodbye morning #Toronto! #stormAftermath
One of the things I love about learning new things is the amount of time my mind explodes with minor details. Like the use of tuples in the #rustlang when we want to reuse a variable that moves to a function along with the return value of that function. Transferring ownership of return values is just 🤯
As a self-taught dev, learning #Rustlang and its concepts, such as ownership, is like being back again at week one of learning to program, and I love it. So exciting to have a subject that gives me that hunger for knowledge. #CodeNewbie again! #Rust
Sooooo! Is there no liking on Mastodon?

It took me a few days, but I'm getting increasingly familiarized with Mastodon. In parts, thanks to this awesome post by @eric

https://ericwbailey.website/published/my-mastodon-strategy/

My Mastodon strategy

A lot of the following is an attempt of a highly motivated individual trying to recapture what I once had.…

The Market for Lemons

New web services are being built to a self-defeatingly low UX and performance standard, and existing experiences are now pervasively re-developed on unspeakably slow, JS-taxed stacks. At a business level, this is a disaster, raising the question: why are new teams buying into stacks that have failed so often before?

Alex Russell
Another orphan of Twitter.