In Rust we trust? White House Office urges memory safety
Is your preferred programming language a matter of national security?
Is your preferred programming language a matter of national security?
In this series, we look at the most loved languages according to the Stack Overflow developer survey, the spread and use cases for each of them and collect some essential links on how to get into them. First up: Rust.
We say a fond farewell to a titan of web tech and review what makes a great developer resume.
Here’s why Rust gets so much love, straight from the Rustaceans themselves.
We're excited to share the results of our 10th annual developer survey! 65,000 developers shared their thoughts on the state of software today.
Node.js creator, Ryan Dahl, left the Node.js project in 2012 and started working with it again around six years later. In using it again, he found a number of design flaws that bothered him. So he decided to create a new implementation of his original idea: Deno, which released V1.0.0 last week.
Why bother to learn a programming language when it will be out of date by the time I master it?
Rust has been Stack Overflow's most loved language for four years in a row, indicating that many of those who have had the opportunity to use Rust have fallen in love with it. However, the roughly 97% of survey respondents who haven't used Rust may wonder, "What's the deal with Rust?"