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Why's guide to Ruby is the only other book of that ilk that I'm aware of.

https://poignant.guide/


Would the results of trying to find agreement between a number of different Lisp style guides be useful or interesting to anyone other than myself?


I don't want to attack you, but its hard not to attack a comment like this. Building more housing won't solve the homelessness problem, building a lot more housing might lower prices a little bit which might mean that some middle class families might be able to buy a home, but that is about it.

Nobody is living on the streets in SF because houses cost too much money. If money was the only issue then they could easily move to a different town where housing is cheaper, there are many places to live that are cheaper than SF.

In my opinion whenever someone says the main problem is the price of housing they are saying it because that is their own personal problem. They want to buy a house, and they think the prices are too high. Why do they not mention unemployment? Or addiction? Or lots of other issues? Because those aren't their own personal problems, so they focus on the one thing that matters to them personally, and that's the price of housing.


> "personal problem. They want to buy a house"

This is extremely short-sighted. Expensive real estate is a blood-sucking vampire squid on the real economy, on every economically productive citizen

You are paying for that overpriced housing every time you buy a coffee, you pay $1 for the coffee beans and you $4 for the coffee shop rent. You pay rent of every person who's services they need, from a delivery man to a plumber.

The idea that rising house prices are okay because you own a house is just as daft as the idea that rising food prices are okay because you have a full fridge.

The optimal strategy is to drive down relative cost of food, housing and energy, and other nessesities of life to zero, that's what we call 'economic growth'. Thats why we no longer live like peasants.


>>you pay $1 for the coffee beans and you $4 for the coffee shop rent

Not just this, every last bit of economy is designed to benefit the exclusivity enjoyed by land lords.

No wonder the biggest beneficiary of the big salaries in Bay Area, CA is eventually the real estate market.

If land/housing/space is in short supply then every economic transaction is a kind of rent, you just don't notice it because you are paying for it instalments, its rent nevertheless.


>This is extremely short-sighted. Expensive real estate is a blood-sucking vampire squid on the real economy, on every economically productive citizen

Now do food, utilities, energy, transportation and government.

The idea that amount of people's resources is dedicated to these "overhead of modern life" type things shouldn't be minimized is mind boggling.


This is just my own personal hair brained idea, but my own idea on the best way to reduce the price of housing is simply to make it harder for people to buy a home. Hear me out. I do not mean increase the price of homes. I mean to drive prices down, you must restrict peoples ability to buy a home.

Essentially, if you make it easier for people to buy a home, then you will end up with more buyers, when you have more buyers then the demand for the product is increased and that results in the price of the product to rise. If you restrict the buyers then there is less demand for the product, and less demand results in the price of the product dropping. If less people are able to buy, then less people are able to sell, if people can't sell then they will lower prices.

It is hard to restrict buyers for houses, the only way I've thought of that is possible is to increase the minimum down payment size. If the minimum down payment size was increased to something really big like 50% for a few years, that would drastically reduce the number of people that would be able to buy a home, and that drastic decrease in buying demand would result in a drastic decrease in prices.

Conversely, where I live the minimum down payment is 5% if tomorrow the gov were to say "we want to make it easier for people to buy a home, and so we are reducing the minimum down payment to 2%" that would mean that more people would qualify to buy a home. More people qualifying would mean that there are more buyers and buying pressure is increased, and increased buying pressure would result in rising prices. So lowering the minimum down payment size, while well meaning, would soon result in the prices for homes going even higher and we would be right back where we started with many people being priced out of the market.

Increasing the minimum down payment size would also mean people effectively get priced out of the market because they would be unable to afford the minimum down payment, but conversely, the prices of houses would fall drastically because of the decreased buying pressure. People would be forced to save for a bigger downpayment, but the total they would pay when they actually buy the home would be decreased.


Lattes in Miami are also $5, just saying.


Building more housing won't solve the homelessness problem

"Solve" is a big word, but substantially ameliorate? Yes: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29193206


I think the effects of housing pricing increases have been studied:

https://comptroller.texas.gov/economy/fiscal-notes/2021/mar/...


I looked at that book, but I was worried about the Gtk part, the book is now a few years old, is the Gtk stuff still relevant? My worry is that Gtk seems to always be coming out with new versions and its hard to know whats still relevant and good.

Is that a valid concern or not?


No it doesn't "prove" it.

But if you look at his crimes, they are believed to include high target underage sex trafficking. Luring the rich and famous into compromising positions for the purposes of blackmail, or just simply supplying the rich and famous with the kind of degenerate and illegal things they desired.

So.. if you're a rich and famous or well connected person, and you are shown to have a relationship with a person like that, the only thing it can possibly lead to is a deeply disturbing insinuation.

Epstein was a monster, and he was supplying a huge network of monsters, we need to find out who they are and deal with them.


Vim, because it does what I need.


* Ruby is a nicer language than Python.

Not only that, it's cleaner, more flexible, and faster.

It's a shame more people don't think for themselves rather than just jumping on the PR bandwagon. But that's life.


* Raw performance

Last time I checked I think that Ruby is faster than Python, and people generally seem to be okay with Pythons speed so I don't really think Rubys speed is as huge an issue as people make it out to be. Also, if this project that the OP mentions eventually realizes it's potential Ruby could become substantially faster than it is today. It will never approach JavaScript or Lua speeds, but faster is always better.

* Runtime metaprogramming from hell, * Monkey patching

Isn't this really the users fault though, just because the language allows bad stuff to happen doesn't mean we should ever do bad stuff.

* Little presence outside web development

Do yo consider NetSec to be web development? Because I've noticed Ruby is fairly active in NetSec but it doesn't get talked about a lot. I've also heard that Ruby is used extensively in embeded devices in Japan but due to the language issue it isn't known or discussed anywhere else. I'm sure there are other weird little corners as well that Ruby is active in but that just aren't really know.


> Last time I checked I think that Ruby is faster than Python

Really? When did you look? PyPy has gotten pretty stinking fast.


Apple established a lucrative unix based desktop by giving it away for free with cool looking hardware, but only after they made it big with the iphone.

If it wasn't for the iphone Apples "unix based desktop" would still be a blip, and probably a smaller blip than Ubuntu.


Apple was already the most profitable PC manufacturer when the iPhone launched. All the other PC manufacturers know how to make hardware and could up their game to match Apple if they wanted to. The one thing they can't compete on is the OS and software.

Ask actual Mac users why they use Macs and I think you'll find the main reason is the OS and applications that run on it. For me it's things like Time Machine, iPhoto and iMovie and back when I switched in 2007, the lack of viruses. In my opinion, and that of enough other people to matter, there are no good replacements for those on Windows.


OS X was out for a whole decade before the iPhone. I can't measure a blip, but I expect Apple were passed that within a year, eg the bondi blue iMac.


I'm not quite sure if this applies, but can't anyone currently write a Lua script for World of Warcraft? In which case the script could possibly be connecting to and interacting with the WoW servers?

If one thing can be said about Lua, it is that embedding Lua is a solved problem, and not something dangerous to be worried about.


It's similar, I suppose. Like the Wikimedia example, the Lua you write for WoW is tightly limited -- there's an API available [1], and you can request some extra data from the server sometimes. However, there's absolutely no loading of external modules, contacting any sort of outside server, or any direct file access. There's also large swaths of "what the player can do" which are blocked off from the API, in the name of not allowing people to automate core game elements.

[1]: http://wowprogramming.com/docs/api


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