Text your question (in your preferred language) to receive instantaneous answers from You.com, complete with credible sources and web links. It’s convenient, fast, and completely free!
I never find google to be good for programming queries. I use you.com for all programming queries, and recently learned to use their Coding Complete app, it's actually great. This article doesn't do it a proper justice
Have you tried you.com? I use it for coding all the time and works great, SO results come pre-ranked based on most voted answers and honestly saves me so much time .https://you.com/search?q=how%20do%20I%20convert%20from%20int... . The best part - it's not google, so it has no ads or junk content
I found this thread interesting, few things that stood out:
The outputs were really good
The shareable link shows both input/output.
"I don’t care as much about “hidden truths” as I do expanding my understanding of self and its relation to the world"
you.com has the best results for coding-related queries. Today, I searched 'torch a 100' on google and I got results for flashlights. And this is despite Google knowing everything in the world there is to know about me. I tried the search on you.com and the first result was Stackoverflow.
I agree with this article, but I can't entirely agree that Reddit is a good alternative for a search engine. As much as I appreciate the content on Reddit, though, it's a database and a forum, not a search engine. I often find myself searching Reddit by either 'site:Reddit.com' on Google or, as of recently, using you.com, which I am positively surprised with; I'd say you.com search of Reddit is probably the best right now.
In my experience, the you.com apps and overall search results aren't affected by SEO the same way that some of the other engines are, which is why I think their results work for me