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| diff --git a/www/index.html b/www/index.html index 1471b9a..5f4f663 100644 --- a/www/index.html +++ b/www/index.html @@ -23,11 +23,24 @@      <article id='homepage-post'>        <h2>Recent Post - 2019-02-17</h2>        <h3>Venturing back into C</h3> -      <p>After working in C++ for home projects that never go anywhere I -      decided to get back to basics and write a utility that I have been -      needing in plain ol' C.</p> -      <p><a href='https://github.com/s3nd3r5/reminder'><b>reminder.d</b></a> is -      a cli and daemon (so far) that manage reminders throughout your day.</p> +      <p>For the past two weeks or so I have been diving back into C +      programming. I've found it to be a very fun and refreshing experience +      coming off of a slog of Java 11 updates at work. I've found comfort +      in its simplicity and frustrations in my "I can do this without an +      IDE" mindset.</p> +      <p>I started C programming in College during a 8 AM course of which all I +      can remember is that it was at 8 AM. I loved programming in C, dealing +      with memory, pointers, no strings, structs, no strings, linking, no +      strings. It was a really interesting difference from the web and Java +      programming I had done previously. Obviously the lack of the +      "string" type made things interesting and initially a challenge +      for me back then. In my most recent endevour I found <code class= +      'inline'>char *</code> to be perfectly suitable for every case I came +      across. It was usually a separate library that was failing me, not a +      fixed char array. This was mostly due to the types of programs I was +      writting in college were text adventures where all of what I did was +      using strings. And my lack of understanding of what was actually +      happening in C was really what was causing all the issues.</p>        <div id='footer'>          <a href='/blog/2019-02-17'>Continue reading...</a>        </div> |