@kangax created a new interesting quiz, this time devoted to ES6 (aka ES2015). I found this quiz very interesting and quite hard (made myself 3 mistakes on first pass).
Here we go with the explanations:
(function(x, f = () => x) {
@kangax created a new interesting quiz, this time devoted to ES6 (aka ES2015). I found this quiz very interesting and quite hard (made myself 3 mistakes on first pass).
Here we go with the explanations:
(function(x, f = () => x) {
import java.util.Arrays; | |
/** | |
* quickselect is a selection algorithm to find the kth smallest element in an | |
* unordered list. Like quicksort, it is efficient in practice and has good | |
* average-case performance, but has poor worst-case performance. Quickselect | |
* and variants is the selection algorithm most often used in efficient | |
* real-world implementations. | |
* | |
* Quickselect uses the same overall approach as quicksort, choosing one |
Table of Contents generated with DocToc
Hi Nicholas,
I saw you tweet about JSX yesterday. It seemed like the discussion devolved pretty quickly but I wanted to share our experience over the last year. I understand your concerns. I've made similar remarks about JSX. When we started using it Planning Center, I led the charge to write React without it. I don't imagine I'd have much to say that you haven't considered but, if it's helpful, here's a pattern that changed my opinion:
The idea that "React is the V in MVC" is disingenuous. It's a good pitch but, for many of us, it feels like in invitation to repeat our history of coupled views. In practice, React is the V and the C. Dan Abramov describes the division as Smart and Dumb Components. At our office, we call them stateless and container components (view-controllers if we're Flux). The idea is pretty simple: components can't
I have moved this over to the Tech Interview Cheat Sheet Repo and has been expanded and even has code challenges you can run and practice against!
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This entire guide is based on an old version of Homebrew/Node and no longer applies. It was only ever intended to fix a specific error message which has since been fixed. I've kept it here for historical purposes, but it should no longer be used. Homebrew maintainers have fixed things and the options mentioned don't exist and won't work.
I still believe it is better to manually install npm separately since having a generic package manager maintain another package manager is a bad idea, but the instructions below don't explain how to do that.
Installing node through Homebrew can cause problems with npm for globally installed packages. To fix it quickly, use the solution below. An explanation is also included at the end of this document.
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import java.io.BufferedReader; | |
import java.io.BufferedWriter; | |
import java.io.File; | |
import java.io.FileInputStream; | |
import java.io.FileNotFoundException; | |
import java.io.FileWriter; | |
import java.io.InputStreamReader; | |
import java.io.IOException; | |
import java.io.PrintWriter; | |
import java.util.Vector; |