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  1. Eric Lipper is a trial lawyer, born and raised in Houston, Texas. He graduated from the University of Texas in 1986 and from Washington University Law School in St. Louis in 1988. After law school, Eric worked for Congressman Michael Andrews before joining Hirsch & Westheimer in 1989.

  2. www.electriceric.comElectric Eric

    Bio & News. Eric Lipper is a singer, songwriter, instrumentalist & producer. As a studio musician, arranger, sideman & performer, he is involved with many types of popular and unpopular music of the last century or two!

  3. 11 de feb. de 2021 · Latest News. FEB 11, 2021 | From Ford Performance Staff Reports. Eric Lipper Proud to Add King Cobra to Fleet of 3 Shelbys and A Ford GT. Not that long ago, you’d be hard-pressed to find any high-end Ford collector willing to say they have a Mustang II in their stable.

  4. 30 de nov. de 2010 · About. Eric Lippert designs programming languages; prior work includes architecting the Hack and Bean Machine compilers at Meta, designing C# analyzers at Coverity, and developing the Visual Basic, VBScript, JScript and C# compilers at Microsoft. He is on Mastodon at @ ericlippert@hachyderm.io and writes a blog about programming ...

  5. 29 de nov. de 2012 · I am a designer of fine programming languages. I am at present on the C# standardization committee. My prior work includes Bean Machine, Getafix and Hack at Meta, C# static analyzers at Coverity, and I was a Principal Developer at Microsoft on the C# compiler team…

  6. 30 de nov. de 2022 · A long expected update | Fabulous adventures in coding. ← Previous Next →. A long expected update. Posted on November 30, 2022. It’s been almost two years since my last update here. A lot has happened. I hope you all are continuing to weather the ongoing multiple global pandemics and other anthropogenic crises.

  7. 1. I wanted to implement concise “pattern matching” in Python, a language which unlike C#, F#, Scala, and so on, does not have any pattern matching built in. Logically a pattern is just a predicate: a function which takes a value and returns true if the value “matches” the pattern, false otherwise. The code for this episode is here.