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The Path to Mojo 1.0

https://www.modular.com/blog/the-path-to-mojo-1-0
1•tosh•1m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I'm 75, building an OSS Virtual Protest Protocol for digital activism

https://github.com/voice-of-japan/Virtual-Protest-Protocol/blob/main/README.md
3•sakanakana00•4m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built Divvy to split restaurant bills from a photo

https://divvyai.app/
3•pieterdy•7m ago•0 comments

Hot Reloading in Rust? Subsecond and Dioxus to the Rescue

https://codethoughts.io/posts/2026-02-07-rust-hot-reloading/
3•Tehnix•7m ago•1 comments

Skim – vibe review your PRs

https://github.com/Haizzz/skim
2•haizzz•9m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Open-source AI assistant for interview reasoning

https://github.com/evinjohnn/natively-cluely-ai-assistant
3•Nive11•9m ago•4 comments

Tech Edge: A Living Playbook for America's Technology Long Game

https://csis-website-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/2026-01/260120_EST_Tech_Edge_0.pdf?Version...
2•hunglee2•13m ago•0 comments

Golden Cross vs. Death Cross: Crypto Trading Guide

https://chartscout.io/golden-cross-vs-death-cross-crypto-trading-guide
2•chartscout•15m ago•0 comments

Hoot: Scheme on WebAssembly

https://www.spritely.institute/hoot/
3•AlexeyBrin•18m ago•0 comments

What the longevity experts don't tell you

https://machielreyneke.com/blog/longevity-lessons/
2•machielrey•19m ago•1 comments

Monzo wrongly denied refunds to fraud and scam victims

https://www.theguardian.com/money/2026/feb/07/monzo-natwest-hsbc-refunds-fraud-scam-fos-ombudsman
3•tablets•24m ago•0 comments

They were drawn to Korea with dreams of K-pop stardom – but then let down

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvgnq9rwyqno
2•breve•26m ago•0 comments

Show HN: AI-Powered Merchant Intelligence

https://nodee.co
1•jjkirsch•29m ago•0 comments

Bash parallel tasks and error handling

https://github.com/themattrix/bash-concurrent
2•pastage•29m ago•0 comments

Let's compile Quake like it's 1997

https://fabiensanglard.net/compile_like_1997/index.html
2•billiob•30m ago•0 comments

Reverse Engineering Medium.com's Editor: How Copy, Paste, and Images Work

https://app.writtte.com/read/gP0H6W5
2•birdculture•35m ago•0 comments

Go 1.22, SQLite, and Next.js: The "Boring" Back End

https://mohammedeabdelaziz.github.io/articles/go-next-pt-2
1•mohammede•41m ago•0 comments

Laibach the Whistleblowers [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6Mx2mxpaCY
1•KnuthIsGod•42m ago•1 comments

Slop News - The Front Page right now but it's only Slop

https://slop-news.pages.dev/slop-news
1•keepamovin•47m ago•1 comments

Economists vs. Technologists on AI

https://ideasindevelopment.substack.com/p/economists-vs-technologists-on-ai
1•econlmics•49m ago•0 comments

Life at the Edge

https://asadk.com/p/edge
4•tosh•55m ago•0 comments

RISC-V Vector Primer

https://github.com/simplex-micro/riscv-vector-primer/blob/main/index.md
4•oxxoxoxooo•58m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Invoxo – Invoicing with automatic EU VAT for cross-border services

2•InvoxoEU•59m ago•0 comments

A Tale of Two Standards, POSIX and Win32 (2005)

https://www.samba.org/samba/news/articles/low_point/tale_two_stds_os2.html
4•goranmoomin•1h ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Is the Downfall of SaaS Started?

4•throwaw12•1h ago•0 comments

Flirt: The Native Backend

https://blog.buenzli.dev/flirt-native-backend/
3•senekor•1h ago•0 comments

OpenAI's Latest Platform Targets Enterprise Customers

https://aibusiness.com/agentic-ai/openai-s-latest-platform-targets-enterprise-customers
2•myk-e•1h ago•0 comments

Goldman Sachs taps Anthropic's Claude to automate accounting, compliance roles

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/06/anthropic-goldman-sachs-ai-model-accounting.html
4•myk-e•1h ago•5 comments

Ai.com bought by Crypto.com founder for $70M in biggest-ever website name deal

https://www.ft.com/content/83488628-8dfd-4060-a7b0-71b1bb012785
1•1vuio0pswjnm7•1h ago•1 comments

Big Tech's AI Push Is Costing More Than the Moon Landing

https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/ai-spending-tech-companies-compared-02b90046
6•1vuio0pswjnm7•1h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Is this code clean? A critical look at Clean Code 2nd Edition

https://bugzmanov.github.io/cleancode-critique/clean_code_second_edition_review.html
22•birdculture•2mo ago

Comments

nacozarina•2mo ago
his books exist mainly to help sell consulting gigs

there was a whole tribe of 90s oh-oh pundits hustling

flexagoon•2mo ago
fyi, the split code view on your site with two different versions on the left and right is completely broken on mobile
tracerbulletx•2mo ago
The moment in my career when I had enough experience to have my own understanding of what makes code maintainable and organized and didn't have to just kind of rely on the opinions of a couple popular other people was a glorious day. It's not like their theories are all bad, it's just they're prescriptive to their personal style and there are actually a lot of perfectly good ways to organize code.
rendaw•2mo ago
I had Code Complete (uh, I think?) and stuff like using early returns and consistency with conditional clauses (negative or positive first) was an interesting way of looking at software. I don't think I ever read the full book though.

> Am I right? I think I am; but you may disagree. That's OK.

The blog author says these are okay, but I think these are a bad cop-out too. If it's okay to disagree, what you're saying is fundamentally worthless. If what you're saying has merit, would improve code and the lives of people working on it, then it's worth working until people see the merits of what you're saying.

If you're writing a whole book about how people should do something different but then you waffle off, I'm definitely not going to spend effort reading the book.

> assertTrue(b.compareTo(a) == 1); // b < a

I think there are definitely places where comments are useful (providing domain context, definitions, documenting invariants on fields, separating code sections and communicating general intent, etc).

I think reading code is a critical skill though, and a lot of people use comments as a way to avoid that, and I do think there are issues when you do a soft-duplication of the code in the comment. For instance, if the above code had `== 0` would anyone notice?

The ascii diagram thing seems bad to me. I'd be absolutely terrified of having to modify that diagram if something changed (did they use some external program to generate it then copy and paste? what program? can it round trip? Or did they spend hours fiddling with spacing to make everything line up?) People look at code on various width screens, and it's going to wrap and stop being a diagram and instead become a paragraph of gibberish.

The fact that programming languages don't support actual diagrams in comments is a language failure, but I think practically you should stick to prose and if you need diagrams, store it externally as an image or maybe mermaid in a markdown document or something.

And I disagree on commented out code. I've seen too many MRs containing every experiment the author did on the way to producing their final draft, commented out. Commenting out MRs are a way to avoid committing to keeping or deleting code.

Commented out code rots - nobody's going to touch the commented out code when refactoring. At best people will ignore it, and it'll just be noise that gets in the way. At worst people will read it, missing the context from when it was actually functional, maybe getting confused about how various constructs work now based on code from a different era.

The code is already in git if you really need to get it back (as a bonus, with all associated context), there's no point to keeping it around as a comment too.

nickm12•2mo ago
This is yet another very good critique, but it's long past time that we stop paying attention to Uncle Bob.

Not only are his ideas about how to write software patently bad, but he is willfully obtuse when asked to provide nuance or discuss trade-offs. John Ousterhout's dialog with him, published as "A Philosophy of Software Design vs Clean Code" gave him every opportunity to think critically about his own suggestions and he just doubles down.

https://github.com/johnousterhout/aposd-vs-clean-code/blob/m...

He's just trolling us at this point.

GuestFAUniverse•2mo ago
Btw., critiquing: "This is how he cleans the code in 2024: Original version on the left; the cleaned-up version on the right:" -- that doesn't render side-by-side on my mobile and I wish every web author would consider labeling/naming content boxes instead; and would reference that, like good books are doing it.