I'm curious if anybody else here has ever looked at or used the D programming language. Personally, it's my favorite programming language and I find it much more enjoyable to use than any other language. It was designed to be a successor of C and C++, although it's not backwards compatible and a very different language. It's a modern language in many aspects including garbage collection, exception handling, modules, dynamic arrays, associative arrays, functional programming (pure, immutable, shared, etc.), and much more. At the same time, it's a systems programming language - It compiles to machine code, supports pointers, inline assembly, and is fully linkable with C.
While the language itself is great, there are other problems. There isn't a huge number of libraries available for D, and many are out of date or not of the best quality. There are two standard libraries, the official Phobos and the unofficial Tango, which causes some fragmentation in the community. No IDE has full support for D yet, the best is perhaps DDT, a plugin for Eclipse. The best way to participate in the community is a newsgroup server with a buggy web client.
I'm hopeful for the future of D, but I simply don't find it reliable enough for serious development. I don't think it simply needs more time, it's been developed for over 10 years now. What it really needs is growth in the community and a serious effort to make D mainstream.
Wow, imagine you dump hundreds of hours into completing things and unlocking stuff and you lose it all.
Back in the day when cheats were built into games, you could at least unlock things again that way without spending hundreds of hours again. But those days are long gone for some reason as no one builds cheats into games anymore.
So it's even more painful that studio that's on its 6th installment **** it up so badly.
Spotify finally removes the disco ball app icon in the latest update by Ivan Jenic
Image: Spotify
Spotify has just released an update that removes its now infamous disco ball icon. The update reverts the app icon to the familiar flat green logo after weeks of mixed reactions online. The icon arrived on May 13 as part of the company's 20th anniversary celebration and was always intended to be temporary, though Spotify only confirmed that after the backlash started.
The disco ball took the internet by storm, as the reception was split. A vocal group of users called it ugly and disorienting, with some iOS users noting that the 3D glowing effect made the app look like it was stuck mid-update.
On the other end, the icon picked up a following of its own. Its retro, three-dimensional look immediately stood out against the flat, minimalist aesthetic that has dominated app design for years. It even started a small movement, spawning what people started calling "discomorphism," a mashup of disco and skeuomorphism. Other brands started posting disco ball versions of their own logos, probably in an effort to ride the wave of memes that flooded the internet during late May.
Spotify has had a turbulent relationship with its user base lately. Besides the disco ball icon, which certainly wasn't appreciated by everyone, the company has also received backlash for its willingness to include AI-generated music on its platform.
On May 17, Spotify promised the old icon would return “in a few weeks.” And now it looks like that time has finally arrived.
So, whether you liked the disco ball or it made you uncomfortable, it’s now gone for good. The next time you update the Spotify app on your phone, the old, flat-design icon will return.
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+Xinok Subscriber²
I'm curious if anybody else here has ever looked at or used the D programming language. Personally, it's my favorite programming language and I find it much more enjoyable to use than any other language. It was designed to be a successor of C and C++, although it's not backwards compatible and a very different language. It's a modern language in many aspects including garbage collection, exception handling, modules, dynamic arrays, associative arrays, functional programming (pure, immutable, shared, etc.), and much more. At the same time, it's a systems programming language - It compiles to machine code, supports pointers, inline assembly, and is fully linkable with C.
While the language itself is great, there are other problems. There isn't a huge number of libraries available for D, and many are out of date or not of the best quality. There are two standard libraries, the official Phobos and the unofficial Tango, which causes some fragmentation in the community. No IDE has full support for D yet, the best is perhaps DDT, a plugin for Eclipse. The best way to participate in the community is a newsgroup server with a buggy web client.
I'm hopeful for the future of D, but I simply don't find it reliable enough for serious development. I don't think it simply needs more time, it's been developed for over 10 years now. What it really needs is growth in the community and a serious effort to make D mainstream.
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