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  • Google TypeScript Style Guide

    // Good: choose between two options as appropriate (see below). import * as ng from '@angular/core'; import {Foo} from './foo'; // Only when needed: default imports. import Button from 'Button'; // Sometimes needed to import libraries for their side effects: import 'jasmine'; import '@polymer/paper-button'; Import paths TypeScript code must use paths to import other TypeScript code. Paths may be r

    • neue cc - ゼロアロケーションLINQライブラリ「ZLinq」のリリースとアーキテクチャ解説

      ゼロアロケーションLINQライブラリ「ZLinq」のリリースとアーキテクチャ解説 2025-05-05 ZLinq v1を先月リリースしました!structとgenericsベースで構築することによりゼロアロケーションを達成しています。またLINQ to Span, LINQ to SIMD, LINQ to Tree(FileSystem, JSON, GameObject, etc.)といった拡張要素と、任意の型のDrop-in replacement Source Generator。そして.NET Standard 2.0, Unity, Godotなどの多くのプラットフォームサポートまで含めた大型のライブラリとなっています!現在GitHub Starsも2000を超えました。 https://github.com/Cysharp/ZLinq structベースのLINQそのものは

      • プロと読み解く Ruby 3.2 NEWS - クックパッド開発者ブログ

        技術部の笹田(ko1)と遠藤(mame)です。クックパッドで Ruby (MRI: Matz Ruby Implementation、いわゆる ruby コマンド) の開発をしています。お金をもらって Ruby を開発しているのでプロの Ruby コミッタです。 昨日 12/25 に、恒例のクリスマスリリースとして、Ruby 3.2.0 がリリースされました(Ruby 3.2.0 リリース)。今年も Ruby 3.2 の NEWS.md ファイルの解説をします。NEWS ファイルとは何か、は以前の記事を見てください。 プロと読み解く Ruby 2.6 NEWS ファイル - クックパッド開発者ブログ プロと読み解くRuby 2.7 NEWS - クックパッド開発者ブログ プロと読み解くRuby 3.0 NEWS - クックパッド開発者ブログ プロと読み解く Ruby 3.1 NEWS -

          プロと読み解く Ruby 3.2 NEWS - クックパッド開発者ブログ
        • Optimizing Javascript for fun and for profit

          I often feel like javascript code in general runs much slower than it could, simply because it’s not optimized properly. Here is a summary of common optimization techniques I’ve found useful. Note that the tradeoff for performance is often readability, so the question of when to go for performance versus readability is a question left to the reader. I’ll also note that talking about optimization n

          • The Prompt Engineering Playbook for Programmers

            Developers are increasingly relying on AI coding assistants to accelerate our daily workflows. These tools can autocomplete functions, suggest bug fixes, and even generate entire modules or MVPs. Yet, as many of us have learned, the quality of the AI’s output depends largely on the quality of the prompt you provide. In other words, prompt engineering has become an essential skill. A poorly phrased

              The Prompt Engineering Playbook for Programmers
            • GitHub - modelcontextprotocol/servers: Model Context Protocol Servers

              Official integrations are maintained by companies building production ready MCP servers for their platforms. 21st.dev Magic - Create crafted UI components inspired by the best 21st.dev design engineers. ActionKit by Paragon - Connect to 130+ SaaS integrations (e.g. Slack, Salesforce, Gmail) with Paragon’s ActionKit API. Adfin - The only platform you need to get paid - all payments in one place, in

                GitHub - modelcontextprotocol/servers: Model Context Protocol Servers
              • JavaScript Best Practices | The WebStorm Blog

                IDEs CLion DataGrip DataSpell Fleet GoLand IntelliJ IDEA PhpStorm PyCharm RustRover Rider RubyMine WebStorm Plugins & Services Big Data Tools Code With Me JetBrains Platform Scala Toolbox App Writerside JetBrains AI Grazie Junie JetBrains for Data Kineto Team Tools Datalore Space TeamCity Upsource YouTrack Hub Qodana CodeCanvas .NET & Visual Studio .NET Tools ReSharper C++ Languages & Frameworks K

                  JavaScript Best Practices | The WebStorm Blog
                • Inkbase: Programmable Ink

                  With pen and paper, anyone can write a journal entry, draw a diagram, perform a calculation, or sketch a cartoon. Digital tablets like the iPad or reMarkable can adapt pen and paper into the world of digital media. In doing so, they trade away some of paper’s advantages like cheapness and tangibility. In exchange, we get new computational powers like nondestructive editing and ease of transmission

                    Inkbase: Programmable Ink
                  • LogLog Games

                    The article is also available in Chinese. Disclaimer: This post is a very long collection of thoughts and problems I've had over the years, and also addresses some of the arguments I've been repeatedly told. This post expresses my opinion the has been formed over using Rust for gamedev for many thousands of hours over many years, and multiple finished games. This isn't meant to brag or indicate su

                    • Functional programming is finally going mainstream

                      Functional programming is finally going mainstream Object-oriented and imperative programming aren’t going away, but functional programming is finding its way into more codebases. Klint Finley // July 12, 2022 Paul Louth had a great development team at Meddbase, the healthcare software company he founded in 2005. But as the company grew, so did their bug count. That’s expected, up to a point. More

                        Functional programming is finally going mainstream
                      • Announcing .NET 10 - .NET Blog

                        Today, we are excited to announce the launch of .NET 10, the most productive, modern, secure, intelligent, and performant release of .NET yet. It’s the result of another year of effort from thousands of developers around the world. This release includes thousands of performance, security, and functional improvements across the entire .NET stack-from languages and developer tools to workloads-enabl

                          Announcing .NET 10 - .NET Blog
                        • Things we learned about LLMs in 2024

                          31st December 2024 A lot has happened in the world of Large Language Models over the course of 2024. Here’s a review of things we figured out about the field in the past twelve months, plus my attempt at identifying key themes and pivotal moments. This is a sequel to my review of 2023. In this article: The GPT-4 barrier was comprehensively broken Some of those GPT-4 models run on my laptop LLM pri

                            Things we learned about LLMs in 2024
                          • A virtual DOM in 200 lines of JavaScript

                            In this post I’ll walk through the full implementation of a Virtual DOM in a bit over 200 lines of JavaScript. The result is a full-featured and sufficiently performant virtual DOM library (demos). It’s available on NPM as the smvc package. The main goal is to illustrate the fundamental technique behind tools like React. React, Vue and the Elm language all simplify the creation of interactive web

                            • kyju.org - Piccolo - A Stackless Lua Interpreter

                              Piccolo - A Stackless Lua Interpreter 2024-05-01 History of piccolo A "Stackless" Interpreter Design Benefits of Stackless Cancellation Pre-emptive Concurrency Fuel, Pacing, and Custom Scheduling "Symmetric" Coroutines and coroutine.yieldto The "Big Lie" Rust Coroutines, Lua Coroutines, and Snarfing Zooming Out piccolo is an interpreter for the Lua language written in pure, mostly safe Rust with a

                              • All JavaScript and TypeScript Features of the last 3 years

                                TypeScript as envisioned by Stable DiffusionThis article goes through almost all of the changes of the last 3 years (and some from earlier) in JavaScript / ECMAScript and TypeScript . Not all of the following features will be relevant to you or even practical, but they should instead serve to show what’s possible and to deepen your understanding of these languages. There are a lot of TypeScript fe

                                  All JavaScript and TypeScript Features of the last 3 years
                                • Low-Level Software Security for Compiler Developers

                                  1 Introduction Compilers, assemblers and similar tools generate all the binary code that processors execute. It is no surprise then that these tools play a major role in security analysis and hardening of relevant binary code. Often the only practical way to protect all binaries with a particular security hardening method is to have the compiler do it. And, with software security becoming more and

                                  • AST vs. Bytecode: Interpreters in the Age of Meta-Compilation

                                    233 AST vs. Bytecode: Interpreters in the Age of Meta-Compilation OCTAVE LAROSE, University of Kent, UK SOPHIE KALEBA, University of Kent, UK HUMPHREY BURCHELL, University of Kent, UK STEFAN MARR, University of Kent, UK Thanks to partial evaluation and meta-tracing, it became practical to build language implementations that reach state-of-the-art peak performance by implementing only an interprete

                                    • Parsing SQL - Strumenta

                                      The code for this tutorial is on GitHub: parsing-sql SQL is a language to handle data in a relational database. If you worked with data you have probably worked with SQL. In this article we will talk about parsing SQL. It is in the same league of HTML: maybe you never learned it formally but you kind of know how to use it. That is great because if you know SQL, you know how to handle data. However

                                        Parsing SQL - Strumenta
                                      • A new way to bring garbage collected programming languages efficiently to WebAssembly · V8

                                        Show navigation A recent article on WebAssembly Garbage Collection (WasmGC) explains at a high level how the Garbage Collection (GC) proposal aims to better support GC languages in Wasm, which is very important given their popularity. In this article, we will get into the technical details of how GC languages such as Java, Kotlin, Dart, Python, and C# can be ported to Wasm. There are in fact two m

                                        • February 2021 (version 1.54)

                                          Join a VS Code Dev Days event near you to learn about AI-assisted development in VS Code. Update 1.54.1: The update addresses an issue with an extension dependency. Update 1.54.2: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.54.3: The update addresses this issue. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the February 2021 release of Vi

                                            February 2021 (version 1.54)
                                          • WebGPU — All of the cores, none of the canvas — surma.dev

                                            WebGPU is an upcoming Web API that gives you low-level, general-purpose access GPUs. I am not very experienced with graphics. I picked up bits and bobs of WebGL by reading through tutorials on how to build game engines with OpenGL and learned more about shaders by watching Inigo Quilez do amazing things on ShaderToy by just using shaders, without any 3D meshes or models. This got me far enough to

                                              WebGPU — All of the cores, none of the canvas — surma.dev
                                            • Node.js

                                              Notable Changes Deprecations and Removals (SEMVER-MAJOR) fs: remove permissive rmdir recursive (Antoine du Hamel) #37216 (SEMVER-MAJOR) fs: runtime deprecate rmdir recursive option (Antoine du Hamel) #37302 (SEMVER-MAJOR) lib: runtime deprecate access to process.binding('http_parser') (James M Snell) #37813 (SEMVER-MAJOR) lib: runtime deprecate access to process.binding('url') (James M Snell) #377

                                                Node.js
                                              • HTML: The Programming Language

                                                Introduction HTML, the programming language, is a practical, turing-complete[1], stack-based programming language based on HTML, the markup language. It uses elements defined in HTML, the markup language, in order to do computations. To give you a sense of what HTML, the programming langauge, looks like, below is a sample program that prints the values from 1 to 10 to standard out (console.log) A

                                                • 14 Linting Rules To Help You Write Asynchronous Code in JavaScript

                                                  Debugging asynchronous code in JavaScript can feel like navigating a minefield at times. You don't know when and where the console.logs will print out, and you have no idea how your code is executed. It's hard to correctly structure async code so it executes in the right order as you intend it to. Wouldn't it be nice if you had some guidance while writing asynchronous code, and to get a helpful me

                                                    14 Linting Rules To Help You Write Asynchronous Code in JavaScript
                                                  • News from WWDC25: WebKit in Safari 26 beta

                                                    Welcome to WWDC25! We’ve got lots of exciting announcements about web technology to share with you this week. Don’t miss our seven sessions, including What’s new in Safari and WebKit. Today brings the beta of Safari 26, with 67 new features and 107 improvements. We’ll take a tour of them all in this article. But first — Safari 26? Where is Safari 19? You might have seen today during the WWDC25 Key

                                                      News from WWDC25: WebKit in Safari 26 beta
                                                    • How a simple Linux kernel memory corruption bug can lead to complete system compromise

                                                      In this case, reallocating the object as one of those three types didn't seem to me like a nice way forward (although it should be possible to exploit this somehow with some effort, e.g. by using count.counter to corrupt the buf field of seq_file). Also, some systems might be using the slab_nomerge kernel command line flag, which disables this merging behavior. Another approach that I didn't look

                                                      • Go 1.19 Release Notes - The Go Programming Language

                                                        Introduction to Go 1.19 The latest Go release, version 1.19, arrives five months after Go 1.18. Most of its changes are in the implementation of the toolchain, runtime, and libraries. As always, the release maintains the Go 1 promise of compatibility. We expect almost all Go programs to continue to compile and run as before. Changes to the language There is only one small change to the language, a

                                                          Go 1.19 Release Notes - The Go Programming Language
                                                        • Against SQL

                                                          TLDR The relational model is great: A shared universal data model allows cooperation between programs written in many different languages, running on different machines and with different lifespans. Normalization allows updating data without worrying about forgetting to update derived data. Physical data independence allows changing data-structures and query plans without having to change all of y

                                                          • Highlights from the Claude 4 system prompt

                                                            25th May 2025 Anthropic publish most of the system prompts for their chat models as part of their release notes. They recently shared the new prompts for both Claude Opus 4 and Claude Sonnet 4. I enjoyed digging through the prompts, since they act as a sort of unofficial manual for how best to use these tools. Here are my highlights, including a dive into the leaked tool prompts that Anthropic did

                                                              Highlights from the Claude 4 system prompt
                                                            • Land ahoy: leaving the Sea of Nodes · V8

                                                              V8’s end-tier optimizing compiler, Turbofan, is famously one of the few large-scale production compilers to use Sea of Nodes (SoN). However, since almost 3 years ago, we’ve started to get rid of Sea of Nodes and fall back to a more traditional Control-Flow Graph (CFG) Intermediate Representation (IR), which we named Turboshaft. By now, the whole JavaScript backend of Turbofan uses Turboshaft inste

                                                              • GitHub - endojs/Jessie: Tiny subset of JavaScript for ocap-safe universal mobile code

                                                                This document is an early draft. Comments appreciated! Thanks. Today, JavaScript is the pervasive representation for (somewhat) safe mobile code. For another representation to achieve universality quickly, it must be a subset of JavaScript, and so runs at least everywhere JavaScript runs. Whereas JSON is a simple universal representation for safe mobile data, Jessie is a simple universal represent

                                                                  GitHub - endojs/Jessie: Tiny subset of JavaScript for ocap-safe universal mobile code
                                                                • Hacker News folk wisdom on visual programming

                                                                  I’m a fairly frequent Hacker News lurker, especially when I have some other important task that I’m avoiding. I normally head to the Active page (lots of comments, good for procrastination) and pick a nice long discussion thread to browse. So over time I’ve ended up with a good sense of what topics come up a lot. “The Bay Area is too expensive.” “There are too many JavaScript frameworks.” “Bootcam

                                                                    Hacker News folk wisdom on visual programming
                                                                  • The React Cheatsheet for 2022

                                                                    Do you want to get up to speed with React as quickly as possible? I’ve put together a super helpful cheatsheet to give you a complete overview of all of the React concepts you need to know in 2022. Click here to download the cheatsheet in PDF format. It includes all of the essential information in this article as a convenient PDF guide. Let’s get started! Table of Contents React Elements React Ele

                                                                      The React Cheatsheet for 2022
                                                                    • Speeding up the JavaScript ecosystem - eslint

                                                                      We've talked quite a bit about linting in the past two posts of this series, so I thought it's time to give eslint the proper limelight it deserves. Overall eslint is so flexible, that you can even swap out the parser for a completely different one. That's not a rare scenario either as with the rise of JSX and TypeScript that is frequently done. Enriched by a healthy ecosystem of plugins and prese

                                                                        Speeding up the JavaScript ecosystem - eslint
                                                                      • A Deep Dive Into The Wonderful World Of SVG Displacement Filtering — Smashing Magazine

                                                                        What exactly is a displacement filter? In this article, Dirk Weber will be diving into one of the most spectacular filter effects: the SVG feDisplacementMap filter primitive. In order to make it all easier to digest, Dirk has divided the article into three parts in which you’ll be exploring how the feDisplacementMap works, methods to create fancy displacement maps in SVG, and methods to animate th

                                                                          A Deep Dive Into The Wonderful World Of SVG Displacement Filtering — Smashing Magazine
                                                                        • prompts.chat

                                                                          Welcome to the “Awesome ChatGPT Prompts” repository! While this collection was originally created for ChatGPT, these prompts work great with other AI models like Claude, Gemini, Hugging Face Chat, Llama, Mistral, and more. ChatGPT is a web interface created by OpenAI that provides access to their GPT (Generative Pre-trained Transformer) language models. The underlying models, like GPT-4o and GPT-o

                                                                          • Is WebAssembly magic performance pixie dust? — surma.dev

                                                                            Toggle dark mode Add WebAssembly, get performance. Is that how it really works? The incredibly unsatisfying answer is: It depends. It depends on oh-so-many factors, and I’ll be touching on some of them here. Why am I doing this? (You can skip this) I really like AssemblyScript (full disclosure: I am one of their backers). It’s a very young language with a small but passionate team that built a cus

                                                                              Is WebAssembly magic performance pixie dust? — surma.dev
                                                                            • Why We Use Julia, 10 Years Later

                                                                              Exactly ten years ago today, we published "Why We Created Julia", introducing the Julia project to the world. At this point, we have moved well past the ambitious goals set out in the original blog post. Julia is now used by hundreds of thousands of people. It is taught at hundreds of universities and entire companies are being formed that build their software stacks on Julia. From personalized me

                                                                                Why We Use Julia, 10 Years Later
                                                                              • Go 1.19 Release Notes - The Go Programming Language

                                                                                Introduction to Go 1.19 The latest Go release, version 1.19, arrives five months after Go 1.18. Most of its changes are in the implementation of the toolchain, runtime, and libraries. As always, the release maintains the Go 1 promise of compatibility. We expect almost all Go programs to continue to compile and run as before. Changes to the language There is only one small change to the language, a

                                                                                  Go 1.19 Release Notes - The Go Programming Language
                                                                                • Making Cloudflare the best platform for building AI Agents

                                                                                  Making Cloudflare the best platform for building AI Agents2025-02-25 As engineers, we’re obsessed with efficiency and automating anything we find ourselves doing more than twice. If you’ve ever done this, you know that the happy path is always easy, but the second the inputs get complex, automation becomes really hard. This is because computers have traditionally required extremely specific instru

                                                                                    Making Cloudflare the best platform for building AI Agents