• @[email protected]
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    409 months ago

    Asshole take: if you share your project online but not the source code I immediately think your code sucks.

    Let’s be real your clone project is not something a venture capitalist is going to invest in, there’s literally no reason to hide it but shame. Shame of sinful and bad code.

    • @[email protected]
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      149 months ago

      This applies to any project, really. At my workplace, if someone refuses to let other teams look under the hood of a product, 95% of the time, it’s because their code is absolute garbage, but their leaders didn’t want to wait so they pushed it to prod and now it’s up to some junior employee to fix all the shit that blows up in prod.

      And just for closure, 5% of the time, it’s because there actually is no product at all.

    • @[email protected]
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      119 months ago

      I have a project that I shared online, and the source code isn’t shared BECAUSE it sucks lol

      • @xmunk
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        69 months ago

        Well… share it - then you might get help making it suck less.

          • @[email protected]
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            19 months ago

            One of the best devs I’ve ever had the pleasure to meet chatted with me about the worst code we’ve ever wrote. We even provided links to the specific repos and lines. Nothing to be ashamed of.

    • HTTP_404_NotFound
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      59 months ago

      For certain projects I monetize, there are reasons I don’t share the code.

      Patents don’t magically find people infringing your intellectual property. The owness is on you.

      That being said, I have bills to pay, and mouths to feed. Giving my solutions away for free, doesn’t help those issues.

    • @Jumuta
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      49 months ago

      Every proprietary software I touch makes me feel like it’s gooey and sticky and ewwww