71 private links
Very thorough overview of everything you can do with vim but also your IDE vim emulation.
I find debuggers to be underused at quite a few places. A shame when you see what they can do nowadays, and they keep improving!
I tend to agree with this quite a lot. Git submodules tend to create lots of strange issues and rather bad developer experience. Even worse it's not necessarily spotted straight away, you notice the real pains only after having invested in it quite a bit. There are alternatives worth exploring though.
Having taught quite a bit at the university, having interviewed quite a few junior developers... I have to agree what's proposed here is missing from most curricula. I wish this would be taught more systematically. If not at least students everywhere should know this online course exists.
Looks like an interesting tool for scripting refactorings. Seems lightweight and more forgiving than Semgrep, looks like there's space for both in our tool belts.
Oh, that looks very interesting. I'd definitely have use for this. I tend to manage several aws or ssh configs per customers and it's not always easy to deal with. This could lead to a nice separation.
A love letter to Makefiles. A couple of interesting tricks in there.
Interesting little tool. I usually use make for this kind of things, but it seems to bring some benefits for non build tasks.
OK, that looks like shell history on steroids. Definitely something I will try out.
More elements on why we should all be concerned about Visual Studio Code and the state of development tools overall. It's clearly moving more and more proprietary. Visual Studio Code's ecosystem is a very well designed trap. I see it more and more around me (even tried it for a little while to see what it was all about). What can I say... Go Kate Go! And also we clearly need many more LSP servers.
Early days but this potentially looks like an interesting tool to manage developer environments.
I definitely recommend adopting this mindset. Been doing most of that for a long time and this definitely helps.
Big shout out to make, one of my favorites Unix tools. I like some of the ideas for improvements listed here.
That looks like a nifty and convenient tool.
A good reminder that there is not a one size fits all solution in the tech world. Also be skeptical of the silver bullets that "obviously" everyone should use. Project context matters above all.
Interesting little tool for exploring pipe expressions with live previews on the command line.