I've never used any apps (I avoid mobile apps at all cost) and Lemmy seems to work perfectly well on the web, both on desktop and on mobile. Can you point out what makes you want to use an app for Lemmy (or Reddit and similar websites)?
FYI when I click on your first link, I go to https://lemmy.world/c/programming which is completely empty.
Does any of these have good programming content? Unfortunately, I can't find anything interesting (some of them don't have anything at all, interesting or not) so far. Really missing reddit/r/programming.
Thanks for the clarifications.
I still seem to be able to comment on posts on [email protected] ... only other lemmy.world users will see those comments?
Why can't I see all comments on a post?
https://lemmy.world/post/330415
Why can't I see all comments on a post? - Lemmy.world
I posted a comment on this post: https://lemmy.world/post/270586
[https://lemmy.world/post/270586] My comment is the only one so far… I
accidentally found that this same post had lots of comments if I access it via
this other link: https://lemmy.one/post/190223 [https://lemmy.one/post/190223]
Are these completely different posts because they’re in different Lemmy
instances? Why don’t the two get “joined” together? Do they look separate
because the user just posted them twice in different instances, or there’s some
“per instance” comments going on?
It's hard if you have unprotected, shared mutable state.
If you use a language that uses immutable data structures (Haskell, Clojure, Erlang) it's easy!
If you use a language that won't let you share mutable data without the required protection (Rust) it's also easy!
Everything else and you can be sure that even if it looks like it works, it most likely doesn't.
Wow, no one mentioning IntelliJ?? I use the free edition with Rust and it works great... the only thing missing is a debugger, which requires the CLion distribution which is not free... but so far that hasn't been a big problem for me.
When I was still at university, I started working on a place where Spring was used... they gave me a book called "Spring in Action" to read. I loved reading it and everything made much more sense after that... I highly recommend trying to get a deep understanding of something so central to an application like Spring before you start doing anything more advanced with it. You wouldn't want to drive a F1 car without first learning how to do it properly, it may be fun at first but you're likely to crash and burn.
In Java it's really rare to see hundreds of files in a single package (dir)... do you have examples showing anything different??