Linux CodeProject
Would there be any interest in making a new site devoted to linux-unix programming ? It would contain forums for asking questions and an article submission system for programming articles in C/C++/PHP, etc. The model for this is CodeProject (http://www.codeproject.com). Excuse the post if something like this already exists.
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I love Linux, but when I write code I prefer it to be platform independent. Thats why I use Java (maybe I'm just lazy). Most other languages can be used platform independently as well.
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i think that coding in platform-indepent language like Java is at loss of performance, and keeping performance up to standarized common-architecture elements instead of specialized architectures features is like a communist economy: everyone is equally poor. But that's just my opinion
It would be very handy a *nix codeproject-like site, which everyone could bring his codes to everyone, and it could be organized on an architecture-language basis Hano |
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You might be recognizing a trend here, its called modularity. It makes your code more reusable. |
You're right, i don't know what was i thinking. but are you aware that some high-performance programs (i.e:games like quake, music software like cubase) which relay heavily on hardware are unavoidably oriented to specific hardwares/OS?
if it wouldn't, porting software would be trivial. And i'm sure that Java is very cool for small programs, but i don't think that in near future we'll see whooping-fast 3D-shooters written on Java. Of course there're cool steps in that directions: ftlk is a very good platform-independent GUI enviroment, the SDL (simple directmedia layer) , and others i won't bother mention. But aside exceptions like openGL ( one of the few really hardware/OS independent graphics library ) even if these libraries are pretty independent of the *nix&&*BSD OS, there is a quantum leap to make these work on, say OS/2, or say BeOs, or say OS/X, or say windoze. About a page for sharing code, You're right, there's no point in classifying code on differents architectures. Neither on Language. I think the better way of classifying code is on which level it talks to hardware. i.e: drivers (which are all written is ASM) are ground level, graphics/audio/video/intercommunications libraries (which are mostly written in C, like the linux kernel )are medium level, applications that handle all these things for a purpose like showing a web page or suming two numbers that can be easily written in Java are top level. Well, I guess the point it's that would be very good to have such a page. Hano |
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From my point of view there is going to be a big splitup betwean programmers. I think your going to have RAD programmers doing al the standert things using java, c# and a like.
And you will have the programmers Who are going to write the resorses for the RAD crap and they are going to be the build the new tech. High and will alway`s be in the lower class code but the higher class code wil become faster as the lower class code gets better. Hardwere will get faster butt the demand for resourses will always be infenetly bigger then the systems can deliver. Programming java and C# is like playing with Duplo comared with Technic Lego. No offense this is how i c the future. |
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What if the code is arranged more or less just like posts in linuxquestions? i mean, "general, networking, applications, system, devices ..."
Hano |
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