User LKM - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-17T11:06:33Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/user/996 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1019573/save-icon-still-a-floppy-disk/1202743#1202743 1 Answer by LKM for Save icon: Still a floppy disk? LKM 2009-07-29T20:11:32Z 2009-07-29T20:11:32Z <p>Even though many people won't recognize what the icon actually is, they will quickly learn what it means, so I would keep it for consistency with other apps.</p> <p>In the future, I think the question will become moot as more and more apps will avoid "Save" actions and save each user action automatically. Instead of discarding changes by not saving, people will use "undo" as the dominant paradigm for discarding changes.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/237241/what-coding-mistakes-are-a-telltale-giveaway-of-an-inexperienced-programmer/1118919#1118919 1 Answer by LKM for What coding mistakes are a telltale giveaway of an inexperienced programmer? LKM 2009-07-13T11:20:46Z 2009-07-15T11:24:05Z <p>Inexperienced programmers typically don't know the Libraries well, so re-implementation of common library functions (say, to parse dates, or escape HTML) is often a good way to tell how much experience somebody has.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/459214/long-term-potential-of-iphone-windows-mobile-development-platforms/459420#459420 6 Answer by LKM for Long-term potential of iPhone/Windows Mobile development platforms LKM 2009-01-19T22:22:44Z 2009-01-19T22:22:44Z <p>I don't think Windows Mobile is the iPhone's competition. As far as I can tell, there are four platforms developers should consider for consumer-oriented applications right now:</p> <ul> <li>iPhone</li> <li>Blackberry (with the new <a href="http://na.blackberry.com/eng/developers/application_storefront.jsp" rel="nofollow">App Store</a>)</li> <li>Palm Pré (which will get an App Store)</li> <li>Android (which will get an App Store for paid apps)</li> </ul> <p>Everything else is a non-entity. Symbian and Windows Mobile may become relevant again, but as of today, they are not. There's no healthy market for software on these devices, and it's unclear to me whether a large part of the people who decide to buy Windows Mobile phones even care about third-party software.</p> <p>As for the tools and languages, the differences are insignificant. It's just not an issue. Developers won't abandon a market like the iPhone's simply because they don't like the tools or the language.</p> <p>What's more, Xcode is more than good enough (some prefer it to Visual Studio - I certainly think certain aspects of it are better than their Visual Studio counterparts), and if you know Java, C++ or C#, you'll learn Objective-C within a week at most. It's basically two or three new concepts, a slightly different syntax and reference counting. If you already know a few object-oriented languages, learning Objective-C is a non-issue, and if you don't, it's a good excuse to pick up some new ideas and concepts.</p> <p>The real difference is in the libraries, and I personally vastly prefer Cocoa to the .Net libraries, which often require you to call through to pre-.Net APIs.</p> <p>Perhaps in four years, everything will be different. Perhaps Nokia fixes Symbian for good and takes over the smartphone market. Who knows? You've got to make do with what we have today :-)</p> <p>So my points would be:</p> <ul> <li>Until Windows Mobile actually starts being a viable platform for third-party apps, ignore it</li> <li>Instead, look at the Pré, the iPhone, at Blackberries and at Android Phones</li> <li>Objective-C is just a programming language. It's pointless to even think about it too much. Any programmer can learn it within a week</li> <li>Xcode has its weaknesses, but it also has its strong points and isn't really worse than Visual Studio</li> <li>Cocoa is great</li> <li>Four years is a long time, and nobody knows what will happen by then</li> </ul> <p>Programming for the iPhone is a ton of fun, and you'll learn a lot of new things if you've never ventured outside the .Net world. Just pick up a good book, set aside a weekend, set a small goal (such as a small game, or a todo app, or something like that) and get coding. Even if you don't like Xcode, even if you end up not writing any iPhone apps, you'll come out a better programmer.</p> <p>And if Symbian <em>does</em> win, the experience of learning to write code for the iPhone will at least have taught you how to get up and running on a new platform :-)</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/27516/whats-the-difference-between-programmer-and-software-engineer/27544#27544 22 Answer by LKM for What's the difference between programmer and software engineer? LKM 2008-08-26T08:07:32Z 2008-10-20T08:04:23Z <p>In some countries and states (European countries, Canada, as per Kena's comment, and Texas, as per Tony BenBrahim's comment), the title "engineer" is limited to people with an engineering degree. Depending on where you found the job description, "software engineer" may mean "a person who has studied software engineering," while "programmer" probably means "a person who knows how to write code."</p> <p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engineer#Regulation" rel="nofollow">Wikipedia has more on the regulation of the title "engineer."</a></p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/188162/what-is-the-most-useful-script-youve-written-for-everyday-life/190404#190404 8 Answer by LKM for What is the most useful script you've written for everyday life? LKM 2008-10-10T07:23:00Z 2008-10-10T07:23:00Z <p>A Greasemonkey script which <a href="http://lkm.tumblr.com/post/49437457/kotaku-com-comment-filter" rel="nofollow">removes obviously stupid[*] comments</a> from gaming site Kotaku.com.</p> <p>[*] As identified by common spelling mistakes, all-caps writing, excessive use of "LOL" and similar heuristics.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/147189/how-do-you-keep-a-balance-between-working-training-health-and-family/152361#152361 12 Answer by LKM for How do you keep a balance between working, training, health and family? LKM 2008-09-30T09:22:04Z 2008-10-01T06:34:07Z <p>Everyone knows what you have to do to keep your life in balance: Eat healthy, sleep long enough, keep social contacts, don't work long hours, exercise... The trick is cheating yourself into actually doing these things.</p> <p>Here are a few tricks which help me:</p> <ul> <li><strong>Treat exercise as a game.</strong> I use Nike+ and Wii Fit to cheat me into looking at exercising as a game I play, trying to achieve better scores. Nike+ has the added advantage that you can make your numbers public, so you know that people know when you slack off. Wii Fit is nice because it shows you a graph of your weight, which helps you immediately identify when you're gaining weight. Something else I do is listen to audiobooks <em>only</em> when I'm exercising, so if I want to know how a story continues, I have to go for a run</li> <li><strong>Have an ergonomic work place.</strong> This is part of exercising. Make sure you sit correctly; get a good chair. Find a way to work while standing. Take regular breaks: go outside for a few minutes each hour.</li> <li><strong>Have a landline.</strong> Nowadays, tons of people don't have landlines, they only have cell phones. I've had only a cell phone for about 5 years, and I've found that it discourages people from calling you, hurting your social life. In the few months since I've gotten a landline, I've literally had more random calls from friends than in the five years I've had only a cell phone. This really helps get my mind of work, and encourages me to go out, go to parties, or invite friends over.</li> <li><strong>Avoid interruptions when working.</strong> Programming is an activity you do while "in the flow." Every interruption costs you at least half an hour of "getting back into the flow" time, thus making it harder for you to finish stuff, thus encouraging overtime. I've heard of software companies with a "no interruption day", which is one day each week when people won't ask each other questions, thus allowing developers to have at least one day per week where they get things done. You can also encourage people to ask questions by mail, and then only check mail manually.</li> <li><strong>Have a productive work place.</strong> Get a second screen. Get the OS you like. Get a good keyboard and mouse. Install the software you like working with.</li> <li><strong>Work from home.</strong> This may not be possible for everyone, and it may not work for everyone, but if you can, at least try it. It cuts down on interruptions like nothing else. Even if you have a family it's easier to teach them not to interrupt you while you're working than to teach your coworkers. Also, it allows you to work when you're actually ready to work. I typically find that I'm more alert in the morning, so I tend to work early hours and spend the afternoon doing something other than work. It also allows you to exercise when you feel like it, rather than before or after work hours.</li> <li><strong>Don't mix life with your work.</strong> If you work from home, have a "work room" with a "work computer." Don't do work on your personal computer, and don't do personal stuff on your work computer. Don't give your employer your cell phone number; if he needs to reach you at all times, he should get you a work cell phone. Don't think about work when you're not working, but as soon as you sit in front of your "work computer," concentrate on the task at hand.</li> <li><strong>Don't work 100%.</strong> You're a developer. You probably earn enough that you can afford to work less than 100%, so why not do it? Even cutting down only 20% gives you one additional day each week to spend with your family, or to work out, or to just go for a walk and enjoy yourself.</li> <li><strong>Have your own projects.</strong> I've found that only programming "for work" eventually takes the joy out of programming. If you're working on a big enterprise Java app, why not play around with Ruby at home? If you're working on a huge C# application, why not play around with Objective-C at your Mac at home? You'll learn a lot, you'll discover the fun in programming again, and maybe you'll even write the next million-selling iPhone app :-)</li> <li><strong>Schedule your sleeping.</strong> I put all of my social activity in my calendar, but sleeping is the most important. Not only should you be reminded by an alarm clock to get up in the morning, you should have reminders telling you to go to bed. Simply staying up and working on something is far too easy, and it'll kill you eventually. It's enormously important to get your body to learn when to sleep and when to get up, and this doesn't happen if you don't sleep regularly each day. Yes, I would even encourage people not to sleep in on sundays. If you sleep enough during the week, you won't need to anyways, and if you'll keep a regular sleeping schedule, you'll eventually wake up automatically each day.</li> <li><strong>Catch enough sleep.</strong> You probably don't sleep enough; also, coffee is not a valid replacement for sleep. Not sleeping enough will start affecting your mental capacity relatively quickly, which makes it harder to get work done, which forces you to work longer, which takes away sleep time, and so on.</li> <li><strong>Cook your own food.</strong> Eating healthy is easy to say and hard to do. Most restaurant food is crap, so why not cook your own? It's not hard, and it allows you to control what exactly it is that you eat. You can cook the food the way <em>you</em> like it. Also, cooking is fun. It's an engineering activity; you're basically an interpreter for the cookbook bytecode, but you can improve that program if you find bugs. Also, your friends will love you if you become a good cook.</li> <li><strong>Use something like GTD.</strong> GTD or similar task management systems allow you to get stuff out of your mind. By scheduling everything, you don't have to think about chores which allows you to concentrate on the task at hand.</li> <li><strong>Don't think that you owe your employer anything.</strong> You work there because you want to, not because you're forced to. Your employer needs you more than you need him. Do the best job that you can, but don't let your work become your life.</li> </ul> <p>These are a few of the things that come to mind. I do all of these, and in my experience, they really help tremendously. Hope this helps!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/152712/could-i-get-in-legal-trouble-for-copying-a-websites-stylesheet/152754#152754 7 Answer by LKM for Could I get in legal trouble for copying a website's stylesheet? LKM 2008-09-30T12:07:42Z 2008-09-30T12:07:42Z <p>Yes, you can get in legal trouble for copying a site's stylesheet since it's typically a copyright violation. Worse, you could get publicly bashed on blogs like <a href="http://youthoughtwewouldntnotice.com/" rel="nofollow">youthoughtwewouldntnotice.com</a>, making such blog posts about you high-ranked Google results for your name, thus tarnishing your reputation irreversibly.</p> <p>Don't do it, it's not worth the risks.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/150781/porting-androids-java-vm-to-the-iphone/150851#150851 1 Answer by LKM for Porting Android's Java VM to the iPhone? LKM 2008-09-29T21:43:21Z 2008-09-29T21:43:21Z <p>As of now, there are no existing projects aiming to port Dalvik (the Android VM, which is not <em>really</em> a Java VM since it doesn't execute Java bytecode) to the iPhone. There is, however, at least one "real" Java VM available for the iPhone. You can find it in Cydia on jailbroken phones.</p> <p>The issue with these projects is that Apple doesn't allow third-party apps to execute code, so Java VMs can only run on jailbroken iPhones.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/148118/what-framework-would-you-recommend-for-making-desktop-like-apps-for-the-web/148248#148248 5 Answer by LKM for What framework would you recommend for making desktop-like apps for the web? LKM 2008-09-29T10:54:08Z 2008-09-29T10:54:08Z <p>Due to the speed issues these high-level frameworks cause for many larger (as in: non-trivial) applications, we only use plain jQuery. In our tests, all high-level frameworks broke down in situations where there are many draggable objects or many drop targets, and in situation where long lists (with >1000 entries) were shown on screen.</p> <p>Part of this is due to issues with IE6 and IE7 (where performance suddenly starts to deteriorate dramatically after DOM trees reach a certain complexity), but part is due to the overhead these frameworks generate.</p> <p>So I would not recommend any of the high-level frameworks. My recommendation would be to use jQuery and work with the DOM directly.</p> <p><strong>Some tips to improve performance:</strong></p> <ul> <li>Where possibly, render HTML on the server.</li> <li>Keep the HTML as simple as possible.</li> <li>Avoid having many elements in the DOM tree.</li> <li>Avoid recursive table structure (IE suddenly stops showing them after relatively few levels of nesting).</li> <li>Remove invisible elements from the DOM tree.</li> <li>Remove things from the DOM tree before changing them and then re-insert them, rather than changing them while they're in the tree.</li> </ul> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/25999/secure-online-highscore-lists-for-non-web-games 5 Secure Online Highscore Lists for Non-Web Games LKM 2008-08-25T13:10:37Z 2008-09-28T08:15:04Z <p>I'm playing around with a native (non-web) single-player game I'm writing, and it occured to me that having a daily/weekly/all-time <strong>online highscore list</strong> (think Xbox Live Leaderboard) would make the game much more interesting, adding some (small) amount of community and competition. However, I'm afraid people would see such a feature as an invitation to hacking, which would discourage regular players due to impossibly high scores.</p> <p>I thought about the obvious ways of preventing such attempts (public/private key encryption, for example), but I've figured out reasonably simple ways hackers could circumvent all of my ideas (extracting the public key from the binary and thus sending fake encrypted scores, for example).</p> <p>Have you ever implemented an online highscore list or leaderboard? Did you find a reasonably hacker-proof way of implementing this? If so, how did you do it? What are your experiences with hacking attempts?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/30121/php-and-javascript-regex/30135#30135 1 Answer by LKM for PHP and JavaScript regex LKM 2008-08-27T13:41:08Z 2008-08-27T13:41:08Z <p>I've found that different implementations of regular expressions often have subtle differences in what exactly they support. If you want to be entirely sure that the result will be the same in both frontend and backend, the savest choice would be to make an Ajax call to your PHP backend and use the same piece of PHP code for both regex evaluations.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/136458/how-do-i-with-javascript-change-the-url-in-the-browser-without-loading-the-new/136506#136506 Comment by LKM on How do I, with javascript, change the URL in the browser without loading the new page? LKM 2009-10-08T21:03:44Z 2009-10-08T21:03:44Z There is now a proposal to make search engines see hashes: <a href="http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2009/10/proposal-for-making-ajax-crawlable.html" rel="nofollow">googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2009/10/&hellip;</a> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/237241/what-coding-mistakes-are-a-telltale-giveaway-of-an-inexperienced-programmer/1118919#1118919 Comment by LKM on What coding mistakes are a telltale giveaway of an inexperienced programmer? LKM 2009-07-15T11:23:37Z 2009-07-15T11:23:37Z That's why only people with experience know about all those libraries :-) I agree, though, that you can't expect people to know about <i>all</i> libraries, but I think knowledge of some common libraries is a good indicator of experience. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/237241/what-coding-mistakes-are-a-telltale-giveaway-of-an-inexperienced-programmer/237244#237244 Comment by LKM on What coding mistakes are a telltale giveaway of an inexperienced programmer? LKM 2009-07-13T11:18:36Z 2009-07-13T11:18:36Z While this particular piece of code is probably always a poor idea, some languages require similar constructs if you want to return a boolean regardless of the type of &quot;test&quot;. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/844658/what-does-private-mean-in-objective-c Comment by LKM on What does "@private" mean in Objective-C? LKM 2009-05-10T07:14:06Z 2009-05-10T07:14:06Z The highest-ranking Google results for [&quot;objective-c&quot; @private] are currently not terribly useful for beginners. They say things like &quot;it's similar to C++&quot; and &quot;it's a compiler directive to make instance variables private&quot;. If this questions ends up being a high-ranked Google answer, it will help a lot of beginners figure out what @private means. So while the question may be lazy, it's neither vague nor useless, and answering it properly might help a lot of beginners. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/406760/whats-your-most-controversial-programming-opinion/406883#406883 Comment by LKM on What's your most controversial programming opinion? LKM 2009-01-10T13:01:08Z 2009-01-10T13:01:08Z There's a difference between &quot;hey, check out this UML, see any issues with the architecture?&quot; and &quot;hey, check out my code, see any issues with the architecture?&quot; Humans aren't particularly good at parsing code; they're good at parsing images, though. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/406760/whats-your-most-controversial-programming-opinion/406807#406807 Comment by LKM on What's your most controversial programming opinion? LKM 2009-01-10T12:58:52Z 2009-01-10T12:58:52Z I hope you don't write library or api code :-) It's easy for you to later turn public variables into methods if you own the code. If other people use your stuff and rely on its signature, not so much. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/406760/whats-your-most-controversial-programming-opinion/406812#406812 Comment by LKM on What's your most controversial programming opinion? LKM 2009-01-10T12:48:43Z 2009-01-10T12:48:43Z Simple rule I use when commenting: Don't comment <i>what</i> you did, comment <i>why</i> you did it. I can see what you did; the question is typically why in the world you would want do it that way (and there are often non-obvious reasons) http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157623#157623 Comment by LKM on What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? LKM 2008-11-10T12:09:00Z 2008-11-10T12:09:00Z I like the mistakes question. Bad programmers typically don't notice that they make mistakes at all, while good programmers tend to question themselves because they keep learning new things, and keep noticing better ways of solving problems, thus thinking that their older code is wrong. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157466#157466 Comment by LKM on What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? LKM 2008-11-10T12:05:17Z 2008-11-10T12:05:17Z Similarly, what is the <i>least</i> technical book you've read. Perhaps even more telling than the last technical book they've read :-) http://stackoverflow.com/questions/22358/how-can-i-develop-for-iphone-using-a-windows-development-machine/28573#28573 Comment by LKM on How can I develop for iPhone using a Windows development machine? LKM 2008-10-13T09:55:07Z 2008-10-13T09:55:07Z Mac OS X Server can only be virtualized legally on Apple hardware, afaik. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/22358/how-can-i-develop-for-iphone-using-a-windows-development-machine/22374#22374 Comment by LKM on How can I develop for iPhone using a Windows development machine? LKM 2008-10-13T09:54:28Z 2008-10-13T09:54:28Z Mac OS X Server can be legally virtualized - although only on Apple hardware :-) http://stackoverflow.com/questions/6578/understanding-reference-counting-with-cocoa-objective-c/6591#6591 Comment by LKM on Understanding reference counting with Cocoa / Objective C LKM 2008-10-13T09:51:08Z 2008-10-13T09:51:08Z If you write iPhone apps, you need to manage memory manually. Likewise, if you have apps where real-time performance matters and where you want to avoid suddenly being interrupted by the GC, or if your stuff needs to run in older versions of OS X, you want to manage memory manually. Otherwise, GC. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/6578/understanding-reference-counting-with-cocoa-objective-c/6614#6614 Comment by LKM on Understanding reference counting with Cocoa / Objective C LKM 2008-10-13T09:47:57Z 2008-10-13T09:47:57Z You wrote: &quot;By calling autorelease, we temporarily bump the reference count&quot;. I think this is wrong; autorelease only marks the object to be released in the future, it doesn't increase the ref count: <a href="http://cocoadev.com/index.pl?AutoRelease" rel="nofollow">cocoadev.com/index.pl?AutoRelease</a> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/121203/how-to-detect-if-javascript-is-disabled/121211#121211 Comment by LKM on How to detect if JavaScript is disabled? LKM 2008-10-13T09:23:26Z 2008-10-13T09:23:26Z Would browsere which don't support JS at all not simply ignore the noscript tag and show the image? http://stackoverflow.com/questions/60436/what-is-the-benefit-of-using-only-openid-authentication-on-a-site/173285#173285 Comment by LKM on What is the benefit of using ONLY OpenId authentication on a site? LKM 2008-10-13T08:54:56Z 2008-10-13T08:54:56Z Who is &quot;them&quot;? Are you talking about a specific OpenId provider?