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بهترین رایانه ای که می توانید برای برنامه نویسی و برنامه نویسی در سال 2018 بدست آورید چیست؟ برخی می گویند مک ، برخی دیگر ویندوز … حتی برخی به شما لینوکس می گویند. بنابراین بسیاری از گزینه ها …. این فیلم به سوالات شما پاسخ خواهد داد.

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استیف

#coderscomputer #bestlaptop.

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44 پاسخ به “بهترین کامپیوتر برای توسعه دهندگان در سال 2018؟”

  1. I like gaming and coding so I’m getting a gaming pc, also I do game development so my gaming pc would be good for that
    Specs: Intel i7 9700,
    Nvidia GeForce RTX 2070 Super
    16gb of ram
    2tb of hard drive storage and 256gb of ssd

  2. My take on this is counter-intuitive. I was converting some old-skool legacy 16 bit code written in c, and c++ and just needed something simple to work with. So I went into a store and asked the head nerd about a decent laptop. he was aghast I was thinking about buying the lowest spec lap-top they had "This would be a mistake" he says, and starts to reel off numbers which don't make any sense to me. I bought it anyway, and it's perfect. I know if the code on this laptop runs at reasonable rates with the shitty spec, on a faster spec machine it will be lightening quick (and indeed is). If you can get code running quickly on a piece of shit, it will run much better on something better. Macs are great, but they're fucking expensive. My laptop is an Acer a114-31 could not be happier with it. Total beast. Rock-solid. Bullet proof. Picked it up for 400 bucks. Total bargain.

  3. Most programs used today, and most websites used today were built by devs who were using dual core or less, with below 8gb ram, without SSDs. Let that sink in when considering how much power you need. Also it should be noted the vast majority of devs are located in countries where the average income is very low compared to U.S., Canada, Australia, UK, etc. By the sheer population volume alone we can reasonably conclude that most devs reside in India/China and India leans heavy towards IT. I can assure you the devs there are not using the newest hardware, and are most likely using computers pre quad-core era.

  4. I just built a gaming pc and that was when I got in programming. I went for a Ryzen 5 gtx 1060, 32gb ram, 250 ssd, 2tb HDD, I use windows 10 and Linux runs as a virtual machine. (32gb of ram was a choice because my IT work was becoming slow on 16gb)

  5. I am using a MacBook Air early 2015 with 4gb of ram, 1.6ghz processor, 121 gb of storage. It runs fine for the most part and I've only noticed it runs a bit slow when using photoshop or illustrator at the same time as heavy use of chrome or excel. it also runs slow with WordPress (I'm afraid this might have nothing to do with the computer) or chrome in general. I am learning web development and can now buy myself a MacBook Pro 2018, but I'm wondering If the computer I currently have is enough for this purpose. Would you be able to let me know? Thank you!

  6. I agree with all this.. android studio can be a resource hog especially with an android emmulator.. I love PERL, and you can use an ancient machine for that.. just gui programming isn't a big anymore

  7. Hey Stef I've been doing your web stack course for a couple of weeks now, I'm half way through the JavaScript Foundations and in the variables chapter you talk about creating variables stores information in the computers memory. Do they take up much space? I've got an old macbook air and I don't know anything about computers. I know you said laptops are fine but just wanted to know if you were talking about using them for full scale projects.

  8. i'v felt i need a good computer for android studio or running emulators, on Android studio feels like i drag a widget around takes a few seconds to load the change its turned me off it so switching to flutter,

    VM make it good to use any computer you want. Run apple vm on your machine enable remote login compile your code

  9. I dont agree with the part about performance. If you do web dev use python js etc a toaster is enaugh but building mobile apps where you need to compile, run simulators etc requires something much more powerful.

  10. get the fastest CPU with as much cores as possible 🙂
    I have 10 cores 20 threads CPU. With GTX 1060.
    I don't game that much. But I'm android apps developer.
    If you want to do android apps on a 2 or 4 cores cpu. You will be f up.

  11. thanks for the tips Stef.
    isn't one of the points of .NET Core to be cross platform?
    As for laptops, I only needed to swap out my HDD on my old laptop for an SSD and that's all I needed to get a super fast laptop.

  12. The bulk of your budget should be spent on a pair of good IPS monitors (DisplayPort) and a dual mounting stand you can adjust. The display solution alone can easily be $1500. Your eyes will thank you. 8GB RAM and an i7 is all I use to develop/maintain a large financial app (Java EE). You don't need much to be honest.. NVMe SSD will speed up your builds. I like to add ECC RAM for stability. Your work should be stored on backed up/highly available external storage (i.e. FreeNAS at home, or github or AWS) – not the Windows boot drive. A separate machine (from your development desktop) for a database server does make a big difference if you have a large-ish dev database with sanitized data to work with.

  13. I would say 8GB of RAM and i5 is okay, but 16GB of RAM and a i7 processor will set you for a couple of years. You're going to have more utility with more RAM and processing speed. If you are the type person that listens to spotify, while having your browser opened, and while having an IDE opened, then 8GB is not a good option. Personally, I use a lot of virtual machines as a developer and 8GB of RAM while running 2 VM's is not a good idea. I also tend to have multiple visual studio projects open as well as multiple tabs open in Vivaldi. When you start doing multithreading programming; there is a notable difference between i5 and i7 processors. Now that doesn't mean that you have to have the 8th gen i7. Honestly, 6th gen is just as good tbh, but it depends on what you're doing. As far as storage, that's really up to the developer. I personally like to use a 512GB SSD and here's why. When it comes to SSD's you are not supposed to fill up your capacity more than halfway. It does slow down your SSD. If you do get a 256GB SSD though and you're needing more space, they do have external SSD's that have 500GB of storage; just make sure you have USB-C for quicker transfer speeds (if not then not a big deal).

  14. One additional consideration that you didn't mention is that if you're doing front-end development in collaboration with designers, you're probably going to need to work with Adobe documents to some extent, like Photoshop, which means that Linux is pretty much out of the question. If you're designing everything yourself (don't do this unless you know what you're doing, please) or doing mostly/exclusively back-end stuff then it's whatever, but most designers are not going to want to provide detailed specs on every font/weight/size they used or give you a list of hex color codes, so if you're doing a lot of front-end dev you're going to have to open up their PSDs and figure that stuff out yourself. And DON'T think you can just wing it or eyeball it — nothing gets on a designer's bad side faster than not having a sharp attention to detail on stuff like that.

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