Development Tools | News, how-tos, features, reviews, and videos
With so much to figure out with AI, it makes sense to simplify with familiar development techniques, especially infrastructure as code and Python.
AI-generated code has transformed software development forever. That’s not necessarily good. A solid review process can shrink bloat and attack surfaces.
Data is the heart of the user experience, so shouldn’t developers start there? SQLite, NoSQL databases, and abstractions like Neurelo make that far easier to do.
A new release of Uno in advance of .NET 8 adds support for MVUX and C#-based markup.
Generative AI is great at handling tedium and finding errors, but the expertise and intuition of programmers will always be essential.
Microsoft’s new C# Dev Kit extension for Visual Studio Code turns the programmer’s editor into a complete development environment for .NET.
Prompt engineering is still telling a computer what to do. Studying large language models and the limits of generative AI will keep your job security.
Configuration as code is coming to Microsoft’s Azure-hosted workstations, allowing us to use WinGet, YAML files, and PowerShell DSC to deliver ready-to-run toolchains to developers.
Now 10 years old, the open source passion project that made observability open and composable continues to simplify life for developers.
The time to figure out how to use generative AI and large language models in your code is now.
Sponsored Links