Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | prakashdanish's commentslogin

Yes that's what I meant, but while not specifically Docker containers, I did mean Linux containers that are most commonly managed by container engines such as Podman or Docker.


You're right, that doesn't work the way it is shown. Thankfully, a reader(I'm not sure if it's you) pointed this out with a solution[1] that I plan to add to the post shortly. Again, thanks for pointing this out!

[1] - https://github.com/danishprakash/danishpraka.sh/issues/30


Thanks for pointing that out, I'm curating a PR with all the suggestion from here, should be fixed soon!


Interesting, I was just finishing his biography and it was repeatedly mentioned how he was inspired by his trips to Kyoto and the Japanese Zen mindset in general. Also, his daughter and his son also wanted to visit Kyoto when Jobs asked them to pick a location upon graduation for the very same reasons.

Personally, I loved Kyoto when I was in Japan for a week. It carries in itself an air of calm and serenity wherever you go. I remember I was walking around the homes and alleys outside of Fushimi Inari and it was as magical as the shrine itself.


That makes sense but in the example provided, why can't we use sed with the in-line flag?


Because the -i flag works differently on GNU sed vs non-GNU sed and there is no way to use it portably.


https://danishpraka.sh/

Writing about things I'm interested in, mostly Vim, Go, Make and book reviews.


Since we're on the subject, I would ask this question I've been meaning to ask for a while. I love writing command line tools and I've written a few in Python but the performance isn't there.

Would you suggest me to learn Rust in order to write CLI programs? I'm also looking at haskell for the same but after this thread, I'm really thinking of going the rust way. Ideas?


I personally would strongly recommend going the rust route having spent a decent amount of time learning Haskell. I think youll spend more time working on real problems and learn more about low level programming, in addition to the code being much faster.


I would say it depends on your goals. If performance is your primary concern, then go with rust, one of rust’s primary focuses is performance.

I don’t think of Haskell as the best language for command line dev, but I’m far from expert in either language.


Also try cython.


I came across this before but since I was using tmux splits back then, this sounded like unnecessary overhead but now that I've been using vim splits excessively, this is proving to be a nice little addition.


A lot of people are asking why how is this different from vim-plug. Well, I never came around to use features offered by vim-plug other than install, update & remove. So I wrote this nifty yet functional plugin manager with multithreading support for vim8/nvim.


As a final year undergraduate, this scares me a lot.

Not sure why this made such big news because this is pretty much evident once you talk to a majority of cs undergrads, they literally have no idea and interest in cs but are in it because it is, well, 'trending'.


As a final year undergraduate, this makes me happy. Finally the trimming that IT industry badly needs is happening.

And as a domino effect, admissions are also falling. I hope shitty colleges, like the one I belong from, close down.

Surely, I am having bad time too. I haven't found a job yet. And despite applying to 50-100 companies, hardly 1-2 replied. But I gotta keep trying, hopefully I'll find a job one day. If not, well, it's better not to worry about things out of control. One can always do something to pass that day, and hope for a better tomorrow.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: