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  • Command Line Interface Guidelines

    Contents Command Line Interface Guidelines An open-source guide to help you write better command-line programs, taking traditional UNIX principles and updating them for the modern day. Authors Aanand Prasad Engineer at Squarespace, co-creator of Docker Compose. @aanandprasad Ben Firshman Co-creator Replicate, co-creator of Docker Compose. @bfirsh Carl Tashian Offroad Engineer at Smallstep, first e

      Command Line Interface Guidelines
    • Mojo may be the biggest programming language advance in decades – fast.ai

      I remember the first time I used the v1.0 of Visual Basic. Back then, it was a program for DOS. Before it, writing programs was extremely complex and I’d never managed to make much progress beyond the most basic toy applications. But with VB, I drew a button on the screen, typed in a single line of code that I wanted to run when that button was clicked, and I had a complete application I could now

        Mojo may be the biggest programming language advance in decades – fast.ai
      • 100+ Best GitHub Repositories For Machine Learning

        There are millions of GitHub repos and filtering them is an insane amount of work. It takes a huge time, effort, and a lot more. We have done this for you. In this article, we’ll share a curated list of 100+ widely-known, recommended, and most popular repositories and open source GitHub projects for Machine Learning and Deep Learning. So without further ado, Let’s see all the hubs created by exper

          100+ Best GitHub Repositories For Machine Learning
        • Taming Go’s Memory Usage, or How We Avoided Rewriting Our Client in Rust — Akita Software

          Taming Go’s Memory Usage, or How We Avoided Rewriting Our Client in Rust A couple months ago, we faced a question many young startups face. Should we rewrite our system in Rust? At the time of the decision, we were a Go and Python shop. The tool we’re building passively watches API traffic to provide “one-click,” API-centric visibility, by analyzing the API traffic. Our users run an agent that sen

            Taming Go’s Memory Usage, or How We Avoided Rewriting Our Client in Rust — Akita Software
          • 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

            • 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

              • Advent of Code on the Nintendo DS

                It is December. That means annoying Christmas things are everywhere, including but not limited to the annual programming semi-competition known as Advent of Code. The problem with Advent of Code is that it is a waste of time. Most of the puzzles are in the realm of either string processing (somewhat applicable to programming), logic puzzles (not really applicable to most programming), or stupid go

                • Advice for the next dozen Rust GUIs

                  A few times a week, someone asks on the #gui-and-ui channel on the Rust Discord, “what is the best UI toolkit for my application?” Unfortunately there is still no clear answer to this question. Generally the top contenders are egui, Iced, and Druid, with Slint looking promising as well, but web-based approaches such as Tauri are also gaining some momentum, and of course there’s always the temptati

                  • 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
                    • 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

                      • 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

                        • Directly compiling Scheme to WebAssembly: lambdas, recursion, iteration! — Spritely Institute

                          Directly compiling Scheme to WebAssembly: lambdas, recursion, iteration!Christine Lemmer-Webber — May 30, 2023 It's been just over three months since we announced the Guile on WebAssembly project (codenamed Hoot). Since then we've brought on two fantastic hackers to develop the project and progress has been quick. We now are at the point where we have things to show: we can now compile various Sch

                            Directly compiling Scheme to WebAssembly: lambdas, recursion, iteration! — Spritely Institute
                          • cuneicode, and the Future of Text in C

                            Following up from the last post, there is a lot more we need to cover. This was intended to be the post where we talk exclusively about benchmarks and numbers. But, I have unfortunately been perfectly taunted and status-locked, like a monster whose “aggro” was pulled by a tank. The reason, of course, is due to a few folks taking issue with my outright dismissal of the C and C++ APIs (and not showi

                              cuneicode, and the Future of Text in C
                            • Easy Mode Rust — Llogiq on stuff

                              This post is based on my RustNationUK ‘24 talk with the same title. The talk video is on youtube, the slides are served from here. Also, here’s the lyrics of the song I introduced the talk with (sung to the tune of Bob Dylan’s “The times, they are a-changin’”): Come gather Rustaceans wherever you roam and admit that our numbers have steadily grown. The community’s awesomeness ain’t set in stone, s

                              • The sad state of property-based testing libraries

                                The sad state of property-based testing libraries Posted on Jul 2, 2024 Property-based testing is a rare example of academic research that has made it to the mainstream in less than 30 years. Under the slogan “don’t write tests, generate them” property-based testing has gained support from a diverse group of programming language communities. In fact, the Wikipedia page of the original property-bas

                                • Holiday Book Recommendations for Software Engineers, Engineering Managers and Product Managers

                                  Books perfect as reading or gifts during the end-of-year break for those working in tech. More than 100 book recommendations. I’ve always found books are an underrated way to learn something new. Great books contain years of hard-earned experiences compressed into what you can read in hours. However, you do need to give hours-long attention to them. This allows books to convey ideas that shorter-f

                                    Holiday Book Recommendations for Software Engineers, Engineering Managers and Product Managers
                                  • The 'eu' in eucatastrophe – Why SciPy builds for Python 3.12 on Windows are a minor miracle

                                    This matrix would be a lot larger if it included historical OSes and less common architectures, where support with the respective compiler was often in a 1:1 relationship (i.e. that combination would cover a single cell in the matrix). The matrix also does not cover which programming languages a given compiler is able to process, but for simplicity, you can picture C/C++ here. Of course, GCC remai

                                      The 'eu' in eucatastrophe – Why SciPy builds for Python 3.12 on Windows are a minor miracle
                                    • Simon Peyton Jones

                                      Recorded 2022-02-01. Published 2022-03-25. Simon Peyton Jones is interviewed by Andres Löh and Joachim Breitner. Simon is the creator of Haskell and in this episode he talks about his new position at Epic, the origins of Haskell and why “it feels right”, and the (extra)ordinary Haskell programmers. Andres Löh: Hello Simon. Thank you so much for joining us today. Simon Peyton Jones: Hi Andres, hi J

                                      • Scheduling Internals

                                        A sneak peek to what's coming! I remember when I first learned that you can write a server handling millions of clients running on just a single thread, my mind was simply blown away 🤯 I used Node.js while knowing it is single threaded, I used async / await in Python, and I used threads, but never asked myself "How is any of this possible?". This post is written to spread the genius of concurrenc

                                          Scheduling Internals
                                        • Language Pragmatics Engineering

                                          Summary: The code that gets written is the code that’s easier to write. Anything not forbidden by the language semantics will be done as a “temporary fix”. Codebases decay along the gradient of expedient hacks. Programming languages have syntax, semantics, and pragmatics: how the language is used in practice. The latter is harder to design for. Language pragmatics is tooling, best practices, and t

                                            Language Pragmatics Engineering
                                          • Philosophy of coroutines

                                            [Simon Tatham, initial version 2023-09-01, last updated 2025-03-25] [Coroutines trilogy: C preprocessor | C++20 native | general philosophy ] Introduction Why I’m so enthusiastic about coroutines The objective view: what makes them useful? Versus explicit state machines Versus conventional threads The subjective view: why do I like them so much? “Teach the student when the student is ready” They s

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