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  • 「Postgres で試した?」と聞き返せるようになるまでもしくはなぜ私は雰囲気で技術を語るのか? — Just use Postgres 読書感想文 - じゃあ、おうちで学べる

    はじめに 「Just use Postgres」という言葉を初めて聞いたのは、いつだったか覚えていません。Twitter か Hacker News か、あるいは社内の Slack か。どこで聞いたにせよ、私の反応は決まっていました。「また極端なことを言う人がいる」と。 「それ、〇〇でもできますよ」——この手のフレーズはもう100回は聞いてきました。そして大抵の場合、その〇〇は専用ツールに置き換えられていきます。技術が専門分化していくのは自然な流れです。 全文検索なら Elasticsearch。時系列データなら InfluxDB。メッセージキューなら RabbitMQ。それぞれの分野に専門家がいて、専用のソリューションがあって、ベストプラクティスがあります。「とりあえず Postgres で」なんて、それは思考停止ではないか、と。でも、心のどこかで気になっていたんです。 www.mann

      「Postgres で試した?」と聞き返せるようになるまでもしくはなぜ私は雰囲気で技術を語るのか? — Just use Postgres 読書感想文 - じゃあ、おうちで学べる
    • Logging in Python like a PRO 🐍🌴

      Beyond exception handling, there's something else I see people struggling with, which is logging. Most people don't know what to log, so they decide to log anything thinking it might be better than nothing, and end up creating just noise. Noise is a piece of information that doesn't help you or your team understand what's going on or resolving a problem. Furthermore, I feel people are uncertain ab

        Logging in Python like a PRO 🐍🌴
      • OOP: the worst thing that happened to programming

        > BTC: bc1qs0sq7agz5j30qnqz9m60xj4tt8th6aazgw7kxr ETH: 0x1D834755b5e889703930AC9b784CB625B3cd833E USDT(Tron): TPrCq8LxGykQ4as3o1oB8V7x1w2YPU2o5n Ton: UQAtBuFWI3H_LpHfEToil4iYemtfmyzlaJpahM3tFSoxomYQ Doge: D7GMQdKhKC9ymbT9PtcetSFTQjyPRRfkwTdismiss OOP: the worst thing that happened to programming [2/24/2025] In this article, we will try to understand why OOP is the worst thing that happened to prog

          OOP: the worst thing that happened to programming
        • Introducing Ezno

          Ezno is an experimental compiler I have been working on and off for a while. In short, it is a JavaScript compiler featuring checking, correctness and performance for building full-stack (rendering on the client and server) websites. This post is just an overview of some of the features I have been working on which I think are quite cool as well an overview on the project philosophy ;) It is still

            Introducing Ezno
          • 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

            • How to create Skills for Claude: steps and examples | Claude

              Skills are custom instructions that extend Claude's capabilities for specific tasks or domains. When you create a skill via a SKILL.md file, you're teaching Claude how to handle specific scenarios more effectively. The power of skills lies in their ability to encode institutional knowledge, standardize outputs, and handle complex multi-step workflows that would otherwise require repeated explanati

                How to create Skills for Claude: steps and examples | Claude
              • Rewriting the Ruby parser

                At Shopify, we have spent the last year writing a new Ruby parser, which we’ve called YARP (Yet Another Ruby Parser). As of the date of this post, YARP can parse a semantically equivalent syntax tree to Ruby 3.3 on every Ruby file in Shopify’s main codebase, GitHub’s main codebase, CRuby, and the 100 most popular gems downloaded from rubygems.org. We recently got approval to merge this work into C

                  Rewriting the Ruby parser
                • Announcing TypeScript 4.8 - TypeScript

                  Today we’re excited to announce the release of TypeScript 4.8! If you’re not yet familiar with TypeScript, it’s a language that builds on JavaScript and adds syntax for types. These types let you put your expectations and assumptions into your code, and those assumptions can then be checked by the TypeScript type-checker. This checking can help avoid typos, calling uninitialized values, mixing up

                    Announcing TypeScript 4.8 - TypeScript
                  • 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

                    • May 2025 (version 1.101)

                      Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Release date: June 12, 2025 Security update: The following extension has security updates: ms-python.python. Update 1.101.1: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.101.2: The update addresses these issues. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome t

                        May 2025 (version 1.101)
                      • I Made Zig Compute 33 Million Satellite Positions in 3 Seconds. No GPU Required.

                        Update: I've since added multithreading and pushed astroz to 326M propagations/sec. Read the follow-up → I've spent the past month optimizing SGP4 propagation and ended up with something interesting: astroz is now the fastest general purpose SGP4 implementation I'm aware of, hitting 11-13M propagations per second in native Zig and ~7M/s through Python with just pip install astroz. This post breaks

                          I Made Zig Compute 33 Million Satellite Positions in 3 Seconds. No GPU Required.
                        • 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
                          • syntaxdesign

                            One of the most recognizable features of a languages is its syntax. What are some of the things about syntax that matter? What questions might you ask if you were creating a syntax for your own language? Motivation A programming language gives us a way structure our thoughts. Each program, has a kind of internal structure, for example: How can we capture this structure? One way is directly, via pi

                            • Building a Toy Programming Language in Python

                              I thought it would be fun to go outside of my comfort zone of web development topics and write about something completely different and new, something I have never written about before. So today, I'm going to show you how to implement a programming language! The project will parse and execute programs written in a simple language I called my (I know it's a lame name, but hey, it is "my" language).

                                Building a Toy Programming Language in Python
                              • Agentic GraphRAG for Commercial Contracts | Towards Data Science

                                In every business, legal contracts are foundational documents that define the relationships, obligations, and responsibilities between parties. Whether it’s a partnership agreement, an NDA, or a supplier contract, these documents often contain critical information that drives decision-making, risk management, and compliance. However, navigating and extracting insights from these contracts can be a

                                  Agentic GraphRAG for Commercial Contracts | Towards Data Science
                                • Kalyn: a self-hosting compiler for x86-64

                                  Over the course of my Spring 2020 semester at Harvey Mudd College, I developed a self-hosting compiler entirely from scratch. This article walks through many interesting parts of the project. It’s laid out so you can just read from beginning to end, but if you’re more interested in a particular topic, feel free to jump there. Or, take a look at the project on GitHub. Table of contents What the pro

                                  • A Walk with LuaJIT

                                    The following is a chronicle of implementing a general purpose zero-instrumentation BPF based profiler for LuaJIT. Some assumptions are made about what this entails and it may be helpful to read some of our other work in this area. One major change from prior efforts is that instead of working with the original Parca unwinder we are now working with the OpenTelemetry eBPF profiler. If you missed t

                                      A Walk with LuaJIT
                                    • Announcing TypeScript 4.8 Beta - TypeScript

                                      Today we’re announcing our beta release of TypeScript 4.8! To get started using the beta, you can get it through NuGet, or- use npm with the following command: npm install -D typescript@beta You can also get editor support by Downloading for Visual Studio 2022/2019 Following directions for Visual Studio Code. Here’s a quick list of what’s new in TypeScript 4.8! Improved Intersection Reduction, Uni

                                        Announcing TypeScript 4.8 Beta - TypeScript
                                      • The OpenSSL punycode vulnerability (CVE-2022-3602): Overview, detection, exploitation, and remediation | Datadog Security Labs

                                        emerging threats and vulnerabilities The OpenSSL punycode vulnerability (CVE-2022-3602): Overview, detection, exploitation, and remediation November 1, 2022 emerging vulnerability On November 1, 2022, the OpenSSL Project released a security advisory detailing a high-severity vulnerability in the OpenSSL library. Deployments of OpenSSL from 3.0.0 to 3.0.6 (included) are vulnerable and are fixed in

                                          The OpenSSL punycode vulnerability (CVE-2022-3602): Overview, detection, exploitation, and remediation | Datadog Security Labs
                                        • The joy of building a ray tracer, for fun, in Rust. // flurries of latent creativity

                                          TLDR? You can find the code and a bunch of examples on GitHub at dps/rust-raytracer. Over the holiday break, I decided to learn Rust. Rust is a modern systems programming language which has a really interesting type system. The type system can catch broad classes of common programming mistakes - e.g. ensuring memory is accessed safely - at compile time while generating tight, performant machine co

                                            The joy of building a ray tracer, for fun, in Rust. // flurries of latent creativity
                                          • 0.8.0 Release Notes ⚡ The Zig Programming Language

                                            Tier 4 Support § Support for these targets is entirely experimental. If this target is provided by LLVM, LLVM may have the target as an experimental target, which means that you need to use Zig-provided binaries for the target to be available, or build LLVM from source with special configure flags. zig targets will display the target if it is available. This target may be considered deprecated by

                                            • Edge AI Just Got Faster

                                              When Meta released LLaMA back in February, many of us were excited to see a high-quality Large Language Model (LLM) become available for public access. Many of us who signed up however, had difficulties getting LLaMA to run on our edge and personal computer devices. One month ago, Georgi Gerganov started the llama.cpp project to provide a solution to this, and since then his project has been one o

                                                Edge AI Just Got Faster
                                              • April 2025 (version 1.100)

                                                Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Release date: May 8, 2025 Update: Enable Next Edit Suggestions (NES) by default in VS Code Stable (more...). Update 1.100.1: The update addresses these security issues. Update 1.100.2: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.100.3: The update addresses these issues. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Univers

                                                  April 2025 (version 1.100)
                                                • LLM Powered Autonomous Agents

                                                  Date: June 23, 2023 | Estimated Reading Time: 31 min | Author: Lilian Weng Building agents with LLM (large language model) as its core controller is a cool concept. Several proof-of-concepts demos, such as AutoGPT, GPT-Engineer and BabyAGI, serve as inspiring examples. The potentiality of LLM extends beyond generating well-written copies, stories, essays and programs; it can be framed as a powerfu

                                                  • Solving Quantitative Reasoning Problems With Language Models

                                                    Solving Quantitative Reasoning Problems with Language Models Aitor Lewkowycz∗, Anders Andreassen†, David Dohan†, Ethan Dyer†, Henryk Michalewski†, Vinay Ramasesh†, Ambrose Slone, Cem Anil, Imanol Schlag, Theo Gutman-Solo, Yuhuai Wu, Behnam Neyshabur∗, Guy Gur-Ari∗, and Vedant Misra∗ Google Research Abstract Language models have achieved remarkable performance on a wide range of tasks that require

                                                    • Announcing TypeScript 4.8 RC - TypeScript

                                                      Today we’re excited to announce our Release Candidate (RC) of TypeScript 4.8. Between now and the stable release of TypeScript 4.8, we expect no further changes apart from critical bug fixes. To get started using the RC, you can get it through NuGet, or use npm with the following command: npm install -D typescript@rc You can also get editor support by Downloading for Visual Studio 2022/2019 Follow

                                                        Announcing TypeScript 4.8 RC - TypeScript
                                                      • Compiling typed Python

                                                        It’s been nine whole years since PEP 484 landed and brought us types from on high. This has made a lot of people very angry and been widely regarded as a bad move1. Since then, people on the internet have been clamoring to find out: does this mean we can now compile Python to native code for more speed? It’s a totally reasonable question. It was one of my first questions when I first started worki

                                                        • 0.10.0 Release Notes ⚡ The Zig Programming Language

                                                          Tier 4 Support § Support for these targets is entirely experimental. If this target is provided by LLVM, LLVM may have the target as an experimental target, which means that you need to use Zig-provided binaries for the target to be available, or build LLVM from source with special configure flags. zig targets will display the target if it is available. This target may be considered deprecated by

                                                          • Andrej Karpathy — AGI is still a decade away

                                                            The Andrej Karpathy episode. Andrej explains why reinforcement learning is terrible (but everything else is much worse), why model collapse prevents LLMs from learning the way humans do, why AGI will just blend into the previous ~2.5 centuries of 2% GDP growth, why self driving took so long to crack, and what he sees as the future of education. Watch on YouTube; listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify

                                                              Andrej Karpathy — AGI is still a decade away
                                                            • Flattening Rust's Learning Curve | corrode Rust Consulting

                                                              I see people make the same mistakes over and over again when learning Rust. Here are my thoughts (ordered by importance) on how you can ease the learning process. My goal is to help you save time and frustration. Let Your Guard Down Stop resisting. That’s the most important lesson. Accept that learning Rust requires adopting a completely different mental model than what you’re used to. There are a

                                                                Flattening Rust's Learning Curve | corrode Rust Consulting
                                                              • New – Amazon CloudWatch Evidently – Experiments and Feature Management | Amazon Web Services

                                                                AWS News Blog New – Amazon CloudWatch Evidently – Experiments and Feature Management Update Nov 29, 2021 – This post has been modified to provide more clarity on the new service. As a developer, I am excited to announce the availability of Amazon CloudWatch Evidently. This is a new Amazon CloudWatch capability that makes it easy for developers to introduce experiments and feature management in the

                                                                  New – Amazon CloudWatch Evidently – Experiments and Feature Management | Amazon Web Services
                                                                • Python behind the scenes #13: the GIL and its effects on Python multithreading

                                                                  As you probably know, the GIL stands for the Global Interpreter Lock, and its job is to make the CPython interpreter thread-safe. The GIL allows only one OS thread to execute Python bytecode at any given time, and the consequence of this is that it's not possible to speed up CPU-intensive Python code by distributing the work among multiple threads. This is, however, not the only negative effect of

                                                                  • Boring Python: code quality

                                                                    Boring Python: code quality December 19, 2022 Django, Python This is the second in a series of posts I intend to write about how to build, deploy, and manage Python applications in as boring a way as possible. In the first post in the series I gave a definition of what I mean by “boring”, and it’s worth revisiting: I don’t mean “reliable” or “bug-free” or “no incidents”. While there is some overla

                                                                      Boring Python: code quality
                                                                    • Software Engineering - The Soft Parts

                                                                      In "Software Engineering - The Soft Parts" Addy Osmani shares lessons from his first 10 years at Google on the "soft skills" that can help engineers become effective and scale their effectiveness. This guidance should help junior, mid-career and even senior developers move forward, deal with changing technology, and navigate building non-trivial systems. Today I'll share some of the software engin

                                                                        Software Engineering - The Soft Parts
                                                                      • A 2025 Survey of Rust GUI Libraries

                                                                        I did this in 2020 and then again in 2021, but I’m in the mood to look around again. Let’s look through Are We GUI Yet? and see what’s up these days. The task today is to have a text label and an input field that can change the text in the label. In React, for example, this is basically free: const Demo = () => { let [state, setState] = useState("Hello, world!"); return ( <div> <p>{state}</p> <inp

                                                                        • 使い慣れたプログラミング言語でAWSのインフラ管理をする ~AWS CDKのススメ~ - ABEJA Tech Blog

                                                                          1. AWS CDKとは 2. AWS CDKを触ってみる 2.1 環境構築 Volta Node.js CDK 2.2. とりあえずLambdaを作成するところまでやってみる 2.2.1. プロジェクト作成 2.2.2. デプロイ用のLambda関数を書く 2.2.3. CDKのStackにLambda関数を記載する 2.2.4. デプロイしてみる 2.2.5. お片付け 2.3. CRUDっぽいAPIをAPI Gatewayで公開してみる 2.3.1. Lambda関数を用意する 2.3.2. CDKを用意する 2.3.3. デプロイして動かしてみる 2.3.4. お片付け 2.3.5. 詰まったところ 3. 感想 We Are Hiring! ABEJAでプロダクト開発をしている平原です。ABEJAアドベントカレンダー2023の6日目の記事です。皆さんはAWSでIaCを利用する時には

                                                                            使い慣れたプログラミング言語でAWSのインフラ管理をする ~AWS CDKのススメ~ - ABEJA Tech Blog
                                                                          • January 2023 (version 1.75)

                                                                            Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Update 1.75.1: The update addresses these issues. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the January 2023 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Profiles -

                                                                              January 2023 (version 1.75)
                                                                            • Let's Write a Tree-Sitter Major Mode

                                                                              Let’s Write a Tree-Sitter Major Mode Creating a standard programming major mode presents significant challenges, with the intricate tasks of establishing proper indentation and font highlighting being among the two hardest things to get right. It's painstaking work, and it'll quickly descend into a brawl between the font lock engine and your desire for correctness. Tree-sitter makes writing many m

                                                                                Let's Write a Tree-Sitter Major Mode
                                                                              • Sayonara, C++, and hello to Rust!

                                                                                This past May, I started a new job working in Rust. I was somewhat skeptical of Rust for a while, but it turns out, it really is all it’s cracked up to be. As a long-time C++ programmer, and C++ instructor, I am convinced that Rust is better than C++ in all of C++’s application space, that for any new programming project where C++ would make sense as the programming language, Rust would make more

                                                                                • How it became like this? Ruby Range class

                                                                                  Understanding the core class design and usage via its evolution Years ago, my studies into the Ruby Evolution started with the persuasion that mastering the programming language to express one’s intentions clearly and efficiently may grow significantly by understanding how it evolved and what intentions were put behind its various elements. Moving back through the history of a change of some eleme

                                                                                    How it became like this? Ruby Range class