Programming By Stealth  By  cover art

Programming By Stealth

By: Bart Busschots & Allison Sheridan
  • Summary

  • A collaborative project between Bart Busschots and Allison Sheridan to sneak up on real programming in small easy steps, using the allure of the web as the carrot to entice people forward.
    Show more Show less
activate_primeday_promo_in_buybox_DT
Episodes
  • PBS 169 of X — Advanced YAML Topics
    Jul 7 2024

    In this second (and final) installment about YAML, Bart teaches us who to write multi-line strings and how not to write multi-line strings. He teaches us about String Blocks which is a bit head-bendy but allows you to write human-readable strings and also tell YAML what to do with empty lines and white space.

    After that slightly heavy lift, we learn about how to write much simpler-looking Sequences and Mappings than the way we learned in our introduction to YAML in PBS 168. It's really nifty how you can write them in compact, sensible forms, and even easily combine separate YAML documents into the same sequence or mapping.

    Finally we learn how to use the `yq` language to query JSON, CSV, and XML files using a language that uses `jq` syntax so you'll feel right at home.

    Read an unedited, auto-generated transcript with chapter marks: PBS_2024_07_06

    Show more Show less
    1 hr and 6 mins
  • PBS 168 – Introduction to YAML
    Jun 22 2024

    In Programming By Stealth, we've completed our series on the jq language and now Bart Busschots brings us a two-part miniseries about the YAML data format. He takes us through the history of data formats we've "enjoyed" such as fixed-width text files, Comma Separated Value files, through to JSON and XML. All of them had their place in history but also had their downsides. YAML promises to be human-readable (yay) and computer-readable (also yay.)

    Once we're bought into how YAML is the data format of our dreams, Bart explains that there are only two kinds of data, scalar,s and collections, and that collections can be sequences or mapping and all of these data types go into a document. Luckily this is all of the jargon we'll have to learn and there are useful synonyms from other languages (e.g. sequences are really just arrays).

    I found this lesson enjoyable and not too hard on my little brain so I suspect you'll enjoy it as much as I did.

    You can find Bart's fabulous tutorial shownotes at pbs.bartificer.net.

    Read an unedited, auto-generated transcript with chapter marks: CCATP_2024_06_22

    Show more Show less
    56 mins
  • PBS 167 of X – jq: Recursion, Syntactic Sugar, Some old Friends and a Few Honourable Mentions
    Jun 8 2024

    It was actually bittersweet for Bart and me this week as he taught the final installment in our series of Programming By Stealth about jq. As Bart says partway through our recording, he thought this would just be a few episodes but it took 13 episodes to go through everything Bart thought was fun about this deceptively simple programming language.

    This final installment in the jq series covers querying nested data structures with the `recurse` command. One of the really fun parts of the episode is when he teaches us how to dramatically simplify our code, a concept that's often called syntactic sugar. We get to do `if` statements for the first time, where I wondered why he didn't let us have them earlier! I was cross with him for holding out on us with `try-catch` too because it would have made our coding so much easier. But that was the real theme of this installment – we had to learn the way everything works before learning the shortcuts.

    In the finale, he gives us a few of what he calls "honourable mentions" – little tidbits that came in handy at times.

    You can find Bart's fabulous tutorial shownotes at pbs.bartificer.net.

    Read an unedited, auto-generated transcript with chapter marks: CCATP_2024_06_07

    Join our Slack at podfeet.com/slack and look for the #pbs channel, and check out our pbs-student GitHub Organization. It's by invitation only but all you have to do is ask Allison!

    Show more Show less
    1 hr and 21 mins

What listeners say about Programming By Stealth

Average customer ratings

Reviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.