InfoQ Homepage Development Content on InfoQ
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Image Formats, Performance and Cognitive Load
Tobias Baldauf discusses how to optimize and deliver images for maximum effectiveness.
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Spring Framework 5.2: Core Container Revisited
Juergen Hoeller covers some of the Spring Framework 5.2 technologies: R2DBC, RSocket, the core component container for GraalVM support and compile-time annotation indexing.
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Painless JavaScript Testing with CodeceptJS
Michael Bodnarchuk introduces CodeceptJS, a JS testing meta-framework meant to simplify end-to-end testing.
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Does Java Need Inline Types? What Project Valhalla Can Bring to Java
Sergey Kuksenko talks about the performance benefits inline types bring to Java and how to exploit them. Inline/value types are the key part of experimental project Valhalla.
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Exploring the Chrome Debugger Protocol for Test Authoring
Benjamin Gruenbaum discusses the DevTools (debugger) protocol and how the DOM, JavaScript and the DevTools communicate, plus applications for test authoring.
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Designing Composable Functional Libraries, Not Just for Data Visualization
Tomas Petricek describes the design of a data visualization library in The Gamma, covering principles of functional library design useful to use when tackling problems in other domains.
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Proving Algebraic Laws in Scala Using Stainless
Viktor Kunčak overviews Stainless used to state and formally verify properties of functional programs written in Scala.
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Coccinelle: 10 Years of Automated Evolution in the Linux Kernel
Julia Lawall gives an introduction to the use of Coccinelle and gives an overview of its impact on the Linux kernel.
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Record, Replay, Rinse, & Repeat: Easily Rebuilding Programmatic State
Greg Law talks about the various implementations of record and replay systems that can be used to debug software applications.
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JS � Character Encodings
Anna Henningsen gives an overview over what character encodings are, what the JavaScript language provides to interact with them, and how to avoid the most common mistakes in Node.js and the Web.
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How the Future of Software Will Be Different
Johannes Nicolai discusses what coding might look like for the next generation, what kind of programming jobs will continue to exist in five years and which tasks will be automated by robots.