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The Secret Life of Claude Code: Reading Code You Didn't Write

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  The Secret Life of Claude Code: Reading Code You Didn't Write How to orient yourself in an unfamiliar codebase — and how Claude Code can help you find your footing without losing your judgment #ClaudeCode #CodingWithAI #SoftwareEngineering #DeveloperLife Margaret is a senior software engineer. Timothy is her junior colleague. They work in a grand Victorian library in London — the kind of place where inherited collections are treated with respect, and where no one pretends to have read something they haven't. Timothy has arrived today with someone else's problem. Episode 6 The Inheritance He set the printed file listing on the table without saying anything. Margaret looked at it the way she sometimes looked at things — unhurried, reading from the top. It was long. "Whose is it?" she said. "It was Marcus's. He left in February. It's a billing integration — handles subscription renewals, proration calculations, payment retries, webhook processing....

Run Your Multi-Line Python Code in a Single Line in the Python REPL

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Run Your Multi-Line Python Code in a Single Line in the Python REPL How to use  exec  to run multi-line Python in a single line #Python #REPL #Coding #Programming You’re in a browser. No terminal. No setup. Just a tiny Python REPL powered by  Pyodide . You type: a, b = 0 , 1 for i in range ( 10 ): a, b = b, a + b print (a) Beautiful. It works. But… your REPL says: “One line only, please.” Now what? Enter:  exec()  — your one-line superpower. 🔥 The Problem: Multi-Line Code, One-Line Limit Many web-based REPLs (like those in tutorials, docs, or apps) only accept  one line of input . That means no indented blocks. No multi-line functions. No joy. But wait — there’s a way. ✅ The Fix: Wrap Code in  exec() exec()  runs Python code from a  string  — and that string can contain  newlines  ( \n ) to simulate real structure. So this: a, b = 0 , 1 for i in range ( 10 ): a, b = b, a + b print (a) Becomes this  o...

Happy Pi Day!

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  Happy Pi Day! #Pi #Python #Math 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510...

Your New Best Friend: The Python REPL

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  🐍 Your New Best Friend: The Python REPL Your instant playground for code experiments #Python #PythonREPL #Coding #Programming You know, this isn't the Secret Life series — but I like this! Sometimes the best learning happens when we just play and experiment without a formal script. Let's dive into the  Python REPL —your instant playground for code experiments. “REPL” stands for  Read-Eval-Print Loop , and it's perfect for testing ideas fast. Perfect for:  Complete beginners taking their first steps, experienced developers testing quick ideas, or anyone curious about what Python can do in seconds. 🔧 What is the REPL? When you type  python  in your terminal, you enter the  interactive mode —the REPL. It: Reads  your code Evaluates  it Prints  the result Loops  back for more No need to save files. No need to write scripts. Just type and go — like having a conversation with Python itself! 🚀 Getting Started Open your terminal and ty...

Fun With the Python REPL

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  Fun With the Python REPL Test ideas fast with interactive Python #Python #PythonREPL # Coding #Programming Let's Dive In 🎉 Let’s dive into the  Python REPL —your instant playground for code experiments. “REPL” stands for  Read-Eval-Print Loop , and it’s perfect for testing ideas fast. 🔧 What is the REPL? When you type  python  in your terminal, you enter the  interactive mode —the REPL. It: Reads  your code Evaluates  it Prints  the result Loops  back for more No need to save files. Just type and go! 🚀 Getting Started Open your terminal and type: python You’ll see something like: >>> That’s your cue to code! 💡 One-Liners to Try (Type These One at a Time) What to Type What It Does 2 + 3 Basic math — instantly see  5 "Hello" * 3 String repetition →  'HelloHelloHello' 42 / 7 Division →  6.0 2 ** 10 Powers — 2 to the 10th →  1024 _ * 2 _  holds the last result →  2048 import this The Zen of Python...

The Secret Life of Go: sync.Map

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  The Secret Life of Go: sync.Map The Concurrent Map, Shard Optimizations, and When Not to Use It #Golang #Concurrency #BackendDev #SoftwareArchitecture Eleanor is a senior software engineer. Ethan is her junior colleague. They work in a beautiful beaux arts library in Lower Manhattan — the kind of place where coding languages are discussed like poetry. Episode 28: The Concurrent Map, Shard Optimizations, and When Not to Use It Ethan was staring at a CPU profile on his monitor, looking perplexed. "We upgraded the server to 32 cores," he told Eleanor as she walked by. "But the application isn't running any faster. In fact, the CPU profile shows that almost all the cores are just... waiting." Eleanor pulled up a chair and looked at the flame graph on his screen. It was dominated by a massive red block labeled  sync.(*RWMutex).RLock . "Ah," she said. "You have discovered lock contention. Your cache from Episode 27 is a victim of its own success....