サクサク読めて、アプリ限定の機能も多数!
トップへ戻る
TGS2024
calculist.org
If you’re a JavaScript programmer who’s been intrigued by Rust’s hack without fear theme—making systems programming safe and fun—but you’ve been waiting for inspiration, I may have something for you! I’ve been working on Neon, a set of APIs and tools for making it super easy to write native Node modules in Rust. TL;DR: Neon is an API for writing fast, crash-free native Node modules in Rust; Neon e
On his impossibly beautiful blog (seriously, it’s amazing, take some time to bask in it), Steven Wittens expressed some sadness about asm.js. It’s an understandable feeling: he compares asm.js to compatibility hacks like UTF-8 and x86, and longs for the browser vendors to “sit down and define the most basic glue that binds their platforms”—referring to a computational baseline that could form a ro
I’ve never really understood what “homoiconic” is supposed to mean. People often say something like “the syntax uses one of the language’s basic data structures.” That’s a category error: syntax is not a data structure, it’s just a representation of data as text. Or you hear “the syntax of the language is the same as the syntax of its data structures.” But S-expressions don’t “belong” to Lisp; the
The topic of coroutines (or fibers, or continuations) for JavaScript comes up from time to time, so I figured I’d write down my thoughts on the matter. I admit to having a soft spot for crazy control-flow features like continuations, but they’re unlikely ever to make it into ECMAScript. With good reason. The big justification for coroutines in JavaScript is non-blocking I/O. As we all know, asynch
このページを最初にブックマークしてみませんか?
『calculist.org』の新着エントリーを見る
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く