Articles

  • Aug 10, 2024 | mdpi.com | Yash Shah |Dushyant Singh Dahiya |Harendra Kumar |Angad Tiwari

    All articles published by MDPI are made immediately available worldwide under an open access license. No special permission is required to reuse all or part of the article published by MDPI, including figures and tables. For articles published under an open access Creative Common CC BY license, any part of the article may be reused without permission provided that the original article is clearly cited. For more information, please refer to https://www.mdpi.com/openaccess.

  • Feb 18, 2024 | medium.com | Harendra Kumar

    When building software today, developers are spoiled for choice with programming languages. Two that stand out are Go and Rust — both powerful but quite different. This article compares these languages across various factors to help you determine which is better suited for your needs. We weigh their approaches to concurrency, safety, speed, interoperability and more. We look at where each excels — Go for development and Rust for systems programming.

  • Jan 26, 2024 | harendra21.medium.com | Harendra Kumar

    Get ready to witness the next evolution of the Go programming language with the highly anticipated release of Go 1.22! Unveiling its brilliance in February 2024, this update is a symphony of innovation, featuring game-changing enhancements, refined tools, turbocharged runtime, optimized compiler, and fortified core libraries. Brace yourself for a thrilling dive into the realm of possibilities as we unravel the exciting changes and additions that developers can eagerly anticipate in Go 1.22.

  • Jan 18, 2024 | harendra21.medium.com | Harendra Kumar

    Learn All React Hooks With Example React Hooks are functions that allow developers to control state and lifecycle features from function components. React Hooks are functions that let you hook into React state and lifecycle features from function components. Introduced in React 16.8, these functions include “useState”, “useEffect”, “useContext”, etc. With these hooks, you’re able to control state and other React features without having to create classes.

  • Jan 11, 2024 | harendra21.medium.com | Harendra Kumar

    The universal `console.log` statement has been a reliable tool for information logging and debugging in JavaScript programming. Even if it’s a useful tool, there are some sophisticated methods and substitutes that can improve debugging and bring you more code insights. This post will discuss the reasons behind the need to go beyond console.log’s simplicity and show you some more options that may really step up your JavaScript logging game. a.

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