sawine@71
|
1 |
<h2>Programming Languages</h2>
|
sawine@96
|
2 |
<p>Here are some programming languages that I have experienced.</p>
|
sawine@71
|
3 |
<ul>
|
sawine@71
|
4 |
<li>
|
sawine@96
|
5 |
<h4>QBasic</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
6 |
My first.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
7 |
<li>
|
sawine@96
|
8 |
<h4>C++</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
9 |
The dragon of system programming. My workhorse for efficient solutions.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
10 |
<li>
|
sawine@96
|
11 |
<h4>Java</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
12 |
It's ok. I prefer tea.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
13 |
<li>
|
sawine@96
|
14 |
<h4>Haskell</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
15 |
Functional love-hate relationship.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
16 |
<li>
|
sawine@96
|
17 |
<h4>Prolog</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
18 |
Blew my mind. Awakened my interest in logics, not so much in using the language.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
19 |
<li>
|
sawine@96
|
20 |
<h4>C</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
21 |
Clean, flat, structured. Runs the world under the hood.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
22 |
<li>
|
sawine@96
|
23 |
<h4>Assembly</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
24 |
The isomorphism from human mnemonics to machine code. Feel the cold touch of the machine mind.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
25 |
<li>
|
sawine@96
|
26 |
<h4>C#</h4>
|
sawine@107
|
27 |
It's better than ok. I prefer seeing clear, though.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
28 |
<li>
|
sawine@96
|
29 |
<h4>Python</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
30 |
Pragmatic, well-tempered, aesthetic. Fits perfectly into my method of working.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
31 |
<li>
|
sawine@107
|
32 |
<h4>JavaScript</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
33 |
The saviour of web frontends. Makes web development endurable.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
34 |
<li>
|
sawine@96
|
35 |
<h4>Go</h4>
|
sawine@74
|
36 |
Good idea, weird syntax. Doesn't go well with me. Might give it another go.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
37 |
<li>
|
sawine@96
|
38 |
<h4>Common Lisp</h4>
|
sawine@107
|
39 |
The purity of programming. Haven't found enlightenment yet.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
40 |
</ul>
|
sawine@96
|
41 |
|
sawine@71
|
42 |
<h2>Operating Systems</h2>
|
sawine@71
|
43 |
<ul>
|
sawine@71
|
44 |
<li><h4>GNU/Linux</h4>
|
sawine@108
|
45 |
Ubuntu, Debian, openSUSE, Red Hat and CentOS.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
46 |
<li><h4>Microsoft Windows</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
47 |
Windows 95/98/2000/XP/Vista/7.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
48 |
<li><h4>AmigaOS</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
49 |
Been a while...</li>
|
sawine@71
|
50 |
</ul>
|
sawine@71
|
51 |
<h2>Environments</h2>
|
sawine@71
|
52 |
<ul>
|
sawine@71
|
53 |
<li>
|
sawine@71
|
54 |
<h4>Emacs</h4>
|
sawine@113
|
55 |
<span class="line-through">My prefered editor.</span><br />
|
sawine@113
|
56 |
An affair with good memories.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
57 |
<li>
|
sawine@107
|
58 |
<h4>Vim</h4>
|
sawine@113
|
59 |
My prefered editor. And I prefer my prefered editor.</li>
|
sawine@107
|
60 |
<li>
|
sawine@71
|
61 |
<h4>Visual Studio</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
62 |
Good IDE on Windows. Great debugger integration.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
63 |
<li>
|
sawine@71
|
64 |
<h4>Eclipse</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
65 |
Extendable. It's ok.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
66 |
</ul>
|
sawine@71
|
67 |
<h2>Tools</h2>
|
sawine@71
|
68 |
<ul>
|
sawine@71
|
69 |
<li>
|
sawine@71
|
70 |
<h4>Internet</h4>
|
sawine@108
|
71 |
Chrome for browsing and <a href="http://irssi.org">irssi</a> for IRC.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
72 |
<li>
|
sawine@71
|
73 |
<h4>Documentation</h4>
|
sawine@71
|
74 |
LaTeX.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
75 |
<li>
|
sawine@71
|
76 |
<h4>Version Control</h4>
|
sawine@108
|
77 |
<a href="http://mercurial.selenic.com">Mercurial</a> for private work.
|
sawine@108
|
78 |
<a href="http://subversion.tigris.org">Subversion</a>/<a href="http://cvshome.org">CVS</a> when forced.</li>
|
sawine@108
|
79 |
<li>
|
sawine@108
|
80 |
<h4>This Server</h4>
|
sawine@108
|
81 |
Runs on <a href="http://www.debian.org">Debian</a> with HTML-files served by <a href="http://wiki.nginx.org">Nginx</a>.</li>
|
sawine@71
|
82 |
</ul>
|