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  • TabFS

    Going through the files inside a tab's folder. For example, the url.txt, text.txt, and title.txt files tell me those live properties of this tab (Read more up-to-date documentation for all of TabFS's files here.) This gives you a ton of power, because now you can apply all the existing tools on your computer that already know how to deal with files -- terminal commands, scripting languages, point-

      TabFS
    • How We Made Bracket Pair Colorization 10,000x Faster In Visual Studio Code

      Version 1.93 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from August. Bracket pair colorization 10,000x faster September 29, 2021 by Henning Dieterichs, @hediet_dev When dealing with deeply nested brackets in Visual Studio Code, it can be hard to figure out which brackets match and which do not. To make this easier, in 2016, a user named CoenraadS developed the awesome Bracket Pair Col

        How We Made Bracket Pair Colorization 10,000x Faster In Visual Studio Code
      • Announcing TypeScript 5.0 - TypeScript

        Today we’re excited to announce the release of TypeScript 5.0! This release brings many new features, while aiming to make TypeScript smaller, simpler, and faster. We’ve implemented the new decorators standard, added functionality to better support ESM projects in Node and bundlers, provided new ways for library authors to control generic inference, expanded our JSDoc functionality, simplified con

          Announcing TypeScript 5.0 - TypeScript
        • Modern Node.js Patterns for 2025

          Node.js has undergone a remarkable transformation since its early days. If you’ve been writing Node.js for several years, you’ve likely witnessed this evolution firsthand—from the callback-heavy, CommonJS-dominated landscape to today’s clean, standards-based development experience. The changes aren’t just cosmetic; they represent a fundamental shift in how we approach server-side JavaScript develo

          • 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
            • Tauri 2.0 Stable Release

              We are very proud to finally announce the stable release for the new major version of Tauri. Welcome to Tauri 2.0! What is Tauri?Section titled “What is Tauri?” In a Tauri application the frontend is written in your favorite web frontend stack. This runs inside the operating system WebView and communicates with the application core written mostly in Rust. When Should I Use Tauri?Section titled “Wh

                Tauri 2.0 Stable Release
              • 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
                • How to refactor code with GitHub Copilot

                  We’ve all been there—staring at a function that looks like it was written by an over-caffeinated goblin at 3 AM (maybe even your alter ego). You could pretend it doesn’t exist, or you could refactor it. Luckily, GitHub Copilot makes the second option less painful. Let’s get to it. What is code refactoring? Feel free to breeze past this section if you already know what’s involved with refactoring c

                    How to refactor code with GitHub Copilot
                  • How modern browsers work

                    Note: For those eager to dive deep into how browsers work, an excellent resource is Browser Engineering by Pavel Panchekha and Chris Harrelson (available at browser.engineering). Please do check it out. This article is an overview of how browsers work. Web developers often treat the browser as a black box that magically transforms HTML, CSS, and JavaScript into interactive web applications. In tru

                      How modern browsers work
                    • Writing a C compiler in 500 lines of Python

                      A few months ago, I set myself the challenge of writing a C compiler in 500 lines of Python1, after writing my SDF donut post. How hard could it be? The answer was, pretty hard, even when dropping quite a few features. But it was also pretty interesting, and the result is surprisingly functional and not too hard to understand! There's too much code for me to comprehensively cover in a single blog

                      • PacketProxyで探るGemini CLIのコンテキストエンジニアリング 〜AIエージェントを信頼できる相棒に〜 | BLOG - DeNA Engineering

                        2025.07.18 技術記事 PacketProxyで探るGemini CLIのコンテキストエンジニアリング 〜AIエージェントを信頼できる相棒に〜 by akira.kuroiwa #gemini-cli #ai #security #aiエージェント #コンテキストエンジニアリング #packetproxy 「なんかよく分からないけど、すごい」で終わらせないために こんにちは、DeNA セキュリティ技術グループの 黒岩 亮 ( @kakira9618 ) です。 AIエージェント、とくに Gemini CLI のようなコーディングを支援してくれるツールは非常に強力で、私たちの開発体験を大きく変えようとしています。しかし、その一方で、こんな風に感じたことはありませんか? 「このファイルの情報、勝手にAIに送られたりしない? 大丈夫かな?」 と、情報管理・セキュリティ面で漠然とした不安を

                          PacketProxyで探るGemini CLIのコンテキストエンジニアリング 〜AIエージェントを信頼できる相棒に〜 | BLOG - DeNA Engineering
                        • An Opinionated Guide to xargs

                          Preliminaries What Is xargs? It's an adapter between text streams and argv arrays, two essential concepts in shell. You pass it flags that specify how to split stdin. Then it generates arguments and invokes processes. Example: $ echo 'alice bob' | xargs -n 1 -- echo hi hi alice hi bob What's happening here? xargs splits the input stream on whitespace, producing 2 arguments, alice and bob. We passe

                          • 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
                            • 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
                              • 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

                                • JavaScript performance beyond bundle size

                                  23 Feb JavaScript performance beyond bundle size Posted February 23, 2021 by Nolan Lawson in performance, Web. 8 Comments There’s an old story about a drunk trying to find his keys in the streetlight. Why? Well, because that’s where it’s the brightest. It’s a funny story, but also relatable, because as humans we all tend to take the path of least resistance. I think we have the same problem in the

                                    JavaScript performance beyond bundle size
                                  • Prototyping in Rust | corrode Rust Consulting

                                    Programming is an iterative process - as much as we would like to come up with the perfect solution from the start, it rarely works that way. Good programs often start as quick prototypes. The bad ones stay prototypes, but the best ones evolve into production code. Whether you’re writing games, CLI tools, or designing library APIs, prototyping helps tremendously in finding the best approach before

                                      Prototyping in Rust | corrode Rust Consulting
                                    • Writing Toy Software Is A Joy

                                      I am a huge fan of Richard Feyman’s famous quote: “What I cannot create, I do not understand” I think it’s brilliant, and it remains true across many fields (if you’re willing to be a little creative with the definition of ‘create’). It is to this principle that I believe I owe everything I’m truly good at. Some will tell you to avoid reinventing the wheel, but they’re wrong: you should build your

                                      • Patterns for Reactivity with Modern Vanilla JavaScript – Frontend Masters Blog

                                        “Reactivity” is how systems react to changes in data. There are many types of reactivity, but for this article, reactivity is when data changes, you do things. Reactivity Patterns are Core to Web Development We handle a lot with JavaScript in websites and web apps since the browser is an entirely asynchronous environment. We must respond to user inputs, communicate with servers, log, perform, etc.

                                          Patterns for Reactivity with Modern Vanilla JavaScript – Frontend Masters 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
                                          • Announcing TypeScript 5.0 Beta - TypeScript

                                            Today we’re excited to announce our beta release of TypeScript 5.0! This release brings many new features, while aiming to make TypeScript, smaller, simpler, and faster. We’ve implemented the new decorators standard, functionality to better support ESM projects in Node and bundlers, new ways for library authors to control generic inference, expanded our JSDoc functionality, simplified configuratio

                                              Announcing TypeScript 5.0 Beta - TypeScript
                                            • 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

                                              • How Rust and Wasm power Cloudflare's 1.1.1.1

                                                On April 1, 2018, Cloudflare announced the 1.1.1.1 public DNS resolver. Over the years, we added the debug page for troubleshooting, global cache purge, 0 TTL for zones on Cloudflare, Upstream TLS, and 1.1.1.1 for families to the platform. In this post, we would like to share some behind the scenes details and changes. When the project started, Knot Resolver was chosen as the DNS resolver. We star

                                                  How Rust and Wasm power Cloudflare's 1.1.1.1
                                                • Sparkplug — a non-optimizing JavaScript compiler · V8

                                                  Show navigation Writing a high-performance JavaScript engine takes more than just having a highly optimising compiler like TurboFan. Particularly for short-lived sessions, like loading websites or command line tools, there’s a lot of work that happens before the optimising compiler even has a chance to start optimising, let alone having time to generate the optimised code. This is the reason why,

                                                  • June 2022 (version 1.69)

                                                    Update 1.69.1: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.69.2: The update addresses these issues. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the June 2022 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: 3-way merge editor - Resolve merge conflicts wit

                                                      June 2022 (version 1.69)
                                                    • TypeScript and the dawn of gradual types

                                                      The FullScreenMario project burned brightly for a few short weeks in October 2013 after Boing Boing lauded it as “a pretty impressive example of what HTML5, in-browser functionality can do.” A few days later, it went viral on Reddit and by November, attention turned to scrutiny, and Nintendo took the project down with a DMCA request. Josh Goldberg speaks of his former project with a bit of pride—i

                                                        TypeScript and the dawn of gradual types
                                                      • 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

                                                        • A deep dive into an NSO zero-click iMessage exploit: Remote Code Execution

                                                          A deep dive into an NSO zero-click iMessage exploit: Remote Code Execution Posted by Ian Beer & Samuel Groß of Google Project Zero We want to thank Citizen Lab for sharing a sample of the FORCEDENTRY exploit with us, and Apple’s Security Engineering and Architecture (SEAR) group for collaborating with us on the technical analysis. The editorial opinions reflected below are solely Project Zero’s an

                                                            A deep dive into an NSO zero-click iMessage exploit: Remote Code Execution
                                                          • 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
                                                            • Weird Lexical Syntax

                                                              I just learned 42 programming languages this month to build a new syntax highlighter for llamafile. I feel like I'm up to my eyeballs in programming languages right now. Now that it's halloween, I thought I'd share some of the spookiest most surprising syntax I've seen. The languages I decided to support are Ada, Assembly, BASIC, C, C#, C++, COBOL, CSS, D, FORTH, FORTRAN, Go, Haskell, HTML, Java,

                                                                Weird Lexical Syntax
                                                              • CUPID: for joyful coding

                                                                What started as lighthearted iconoclasm, poking at the bear of SOLID, has developed into something more concrete and tangible. If I do not think the SOLID principles are useful these days, then what would I replace them with? Can any set of principles hold for all software? What do we even mean by principles? I believe that there are properties or characteristics of software that make it a joy to

                                                                • Announcing TypeScript 5.6 - TypeScript

                                                                  Today we’re excited to announce the release of TypeScript 5.6! If you’re not familiar with TypeScript, it’s a language that builds on top of JavaScript by adding syntax for types. Types describe the shapes we expect of our variables, parameters, and functions, and the TypeScript type-checker can help catch issues like typos, missing properties, and bad function calls before we even run our code. T

                                                                    Announcing TypeScript 5.6 - TypeScript
                                                                  • Biome v2.3—Let's bring the ecosystem closer

                                                                    We’re excited to announce the release of Biome 2.3, bringing several features that have been highly requested by the community. This release marks a significant milestone in our journey to support the broader web ecosystem. Once you have upgraded to Biome v2.3.0, migrate your Biome configuration to the new version by running the migrate command: 1biome migrate --write Full support for Vue, Svelte,

                                                                      Biome v2.3—Let's bring the ecosystem closer
                                                                    • Rust to WebAssembly the hard way — surma.dev

                                                                      Toggle dark mode What follows is a brain dump of everything I know about compiling Rust to WebAssembly. Enjoy. Some time ago, I wrote a blog post on how to compile C to WebAssembly without Emscripten, i.e. without the default tool that makes that process easy. In Rust, the tool that makes WebAssembly easy is called wasm-bindgen, and we are going to ditch it! At the same time, Rust is a bit differe

                                                                        Rust to WebAssembly the hard way — surma.dev
                                                                      • Golang Mini Reference 2022: A Quick Guide to the Modern Go Programming Language (REVIEW COPY)

                                                                        Golang Mini Reference 2022 A Quick Guide to the Modern Go Programming Language (REVIEW COPY) Harry Yoon Version 0.9.0, 2022-08-24 REVIEW COPY This is review copy, not to be shared or distributed to others. Please forward any feedback or comments to the author. • feedback@codingbookspress.com The book is tentatively scheduled to be published on September 14th, 2022. We hope that when the release da

                                                                        • Getting started with Web Performance 🚀 - HTMHell

                                                                          by Alistair Shepherd published on Dec 14, 2023 Carefully observing websites in the wild As the murderous tortoises start to converge on Ryūji’s hideout, they pull out their phone. It’s a cheap, older device but it’s survived the toils of the tortoise-ageddon well so far. Thankfully the internet still exists, although a bit slower, so they’re able to search online for how to scare tortoises away. T

                                                                            Getting started with Web Performance 🚀 - HTMHell
                                                                          • Why is building a UI in Rust so hard?

                                                                            What Makes Rust Unique? Why is UI in Rust So Hard? Functional UI to the Rescue If you’ve read Hacker News recently, it’s hard to not think that Rust is the future: it’s being used in the Linux kernel and in the Android OS, by AWS for critical infrastructure, and in ChromeOS and Firefox. However, as wonderful as Rust is–it has yet to take off as a general language for building UI. In 2019, “GUI” wa

                                                                              Why is building a UI in Rust so hard?
                                                                            • Tao of Node - Design, Architecture & Best Practices

                                                                              Tao of Node - Design, Architecture & Best Practices48 minute read One of the main benefits of JavaScript is that it runs both in the browser and the server. As an engineer you need to master a single language and your skills will have a variety of applications. This is what drew me to Node in 2015 - I didn’t have to switch between languages and tech stacks. Node allows you to reuse libraries, logi

                                                                                Tao of Node - Design, Architecture & Best Practices
                                                                              • 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

                                                                                • Go 1.21 Release Notes - The Go Programming Language

                                                                                  Introduction to Go 1.21 The latest Go release, version 1.21, arrives six months after Go 1.20. 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; in fact, Go 1.21 improves upon that promise. We expect almost all Go programs to continue to compile and run as before. Go 1.21 introduces a small ch

                                                                                    Go 1.21 Release Notes - The Go Programming Language