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  • 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
    • The yaml document from hell

      written by Ruud van Asseldonk published 11 January 2023 For a data format, yaml is extremely complicated. It aims to be a human-friendly format, but in striving for that it introduces so much complexity, that I would argue it achieves the opposite result. Yaml is full of footguns and its friendliness is deceptive. In this post I want to demonstrate this through an example. This post is a rant, and

      • March 2025 (version 1.99)

        Update 1.99.1: The update addresses these security issues. Update 1.99.2: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.99.3: The update addresses these issues. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the March 2025 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highligh

          March 2025 (version 1.99)
        • 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

          • April 2022 (version 1.67)

            Join a VS Code Dev Days event near you to learn about AI-assisted development in VS Code. Update 1.67.1: The update addresses this security issue. Update 1.67.2: The update addresses these issues. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the April 2022 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope

              April 2022 (version 1.67)
            • 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
              • Lies we tell ourselves to keep using Golang

                👋 This page was last updated ~3 years ago. Just so you know. In the two years since I’ve posted I want off Mr Golang’s Wild Ride, it’s made the rounds time and time again, on Reddit, on Lobste.rs, on HackerNews, and elsewhere. And every time, it elicits the same responses: You talk about Windows: that’s not what Go is good at! (Also, who cares?) This is very one-sided: you’re not talking about th

                  Lies we tell ourselves to keep using Golang
                • 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

                  • Zig in 30 minutes

                    test.md A half-hour to learn Zig This is inspired by https://fasterthanli.me/blog/2020/a-half-hour-to-learn-rust/ Basics the command zig run my_code.zig will compile and immediately run your Zig program. Each of these cells contains a zig program that you can try to run (some of them contain compile-time errors that you can comment out to play with) You'll want to declare a main() function to get

                      Zig in 30 minutes
                    • VSeeFace

                      Contents About Download Terms of use Credits VSFAvatar Tutorials Manual FAQ Virtual camera Transparency Network tracking Special blendshapes Expressions VMC protocol Model posing iPhone tracking Perception Neuron ThreeDPoseTracker Troubleshooting Preview in Unity Translations Running on Linux Troubleshooting Startup Tracking/Webcam Virtual camera Model issues Lipsync Game capture Log folder Perfor

                      • PowerShell: the object-oriented shell you didn’t know you needed

                        PowerShell is an interactive shell and scripting language from Microsoft. It’s object-oriented — and that’s not just a buzzword, that’s a big difference to how the standard Unix shells work. And it is actually usable as an interactive shell. Getting Started PowerShell is so nice, Microsoft made it twice. Specifically, there concurrently exist two products named PowerShell: Windows PowerShell (5.1)

                        • 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

                          • Blogged Answers: My Experience Modernizing Packages to ESM

                            Random musings on React, Redux, and more, by Redux maintainer Mark "acemarke" Erikson This is a post in the Blogged Answers series. Details on the painful experiences and hard-earned lessons I've learned migrating the Redux packages to ESM Table of Contents 🔗︎ Introduction Redux Packages Background Packages and Configurations Issue History Early Attempts Migrating to Vitest Initial Alpha Testing

                              Blogged Answers: My Experience Modernizing Packages to ESM
                            • Eliciting Reasoning in Language Models with Cognitive Tools

                              arXiv:2506.12115v1 [cs.CL] 13 Jun 2025 Eliciting Reasoning in Language Models with Cognitive Tools Brown Ebouky IBM Research - Zurich ETH Zurich Brown.Ebouky@ibm.com Andrea Bartezzaghi IBM Research - Zurich abt@zurich.ibm.com Mattia Rigotti IBM Research - Zurich mrg@zurich.ibm.com Abstract The recent advent of reasoning models like OpenAI’s o1 was met with excited spec- ulation by the AI community

                              • Rust on MIPS64 Windows NT 4.0

                                Introduction Some part of me has always been fascinated with coercing code to run in weird places. I scratch this itch a lot with my security research projects. These often lead me to writing shellcode to run in kernels or embedded hardware, sometimes with the only way being through an existing bug. For those not familiar, shellcode is honestly hard to describe. I don’t know if there’s a very form

                                  Rust on MIPS64 Windows NT 4.0
                                • iOS Hacking - A Beginner’s Guide to Hacking iOS Apps [2022 Edition]

                                  My first post will be about iOS Hacking, a topic I’m currently working on, so this will be a kind of gathering of all information I have found in my research. It must be noted that I won’t be using any MacOS tools, since the computer used for this task will be a Linux host, specifically a Debian-based distribution, in this case, Kali Linux. I will also be using ‘checkra1n’ for the device jailbreak

                                  • What's New in Emacs 28.1?

                                    Try Mastering Emacs for free! Are you struggling with the basics? Have you mastered movement and editing yet? When you have read Mastering Emacs you will understand Emacs. It’s that time again: there’s a new major version of Emacs and, with it, a treasure trove of new features and changes. Notable features include the formal inclusion of native compilation, a technique that will greatly speed up y

                                    • Rust for Secure IoT Applications: Why C Is Getting Rusty

                                      www.embedded-world.eu Rust for Secure IoT Applications Why C Is Getting Rusty Mario Noseda, Fabian Frei, Andreas Rüst, Simon Künzli Zurich University of Applied Sciences (ZHAW) Institute of Embedded Systems (InES) Winterthur, Switzerland mario.noseda@zhaw.ch, fabian.frei@zhaw.ch, andreas.ruest@zhaw.ch, simon.kuenzli@zhaw.ch Abstract— Memory corruption is still the most used type of exploit in toda

                                      • Type Parameters Proposal

                                        Ian Lance Taylor Robert Griesemer August 20, 2021 StatusThis is the design for adding generic programming using type parameters to the Go language. This design has been proposed and accepted as a future language change. We currently expect that this change will be available in the Go 1.18 release in early 2022. AbstractWe suggest extending the Go language to add optional type parameters to type an

                                        • Rust is more portable than C for pngquant/libimagequant

                                          Improved portability and performance 🦀 libimagequant is a library for generating high-quality palettes, useful for compression of transparent PNG images (~75% smaller!) and making nice GIF animations. libimagequant is now a pure Rust library. The new version is a drop-in replacement (ABI-compatible), so C projects can continue using it. The C version will be maintained for a while to give library

                                          • The Alkyne GC · mcyoung

                                            Alkyne is a scripting language I built a couple of years ago for generating configuration blobs. Its interpreter is a naive AST walker1 that uses ARC2 for memory management, so it’s pretty slow, and I’ve been gradually writing a new evaluation engine for it. This post isn’t about Alkyne itself, that’s for another day. For now, I’d like to write down some notes for the GC I wrote3 for it, and more

                                              The Alkyne GC · mcyoung
                                            • June 2024 (version 1.91)

                                              Update 1.91.1: The update addresses these issues. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the June 2024 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Preview: Incoming/Outgoing changes graph - Visualize incoming and outgoing changes in the Source C

                                                June 2024 (version 1.91)
                                              • Rust vs C++ Formatting

                                                In Rust, if I want to print some 32-bit unsigned value in hex, with the leading 0x, padded out with zeros, I would write that as: println!("{:#010x}", value); In C++23, if I want to do the same, that’s: std::println("{:#010x}", value); The only difference is the spelling of the name of the thing we’re calling (which is a function template in C++ and a macro in Rust) - otherwise, identical. Neverth

                                                • 地面を見下ろす少年の足蹴にされる私

                                                  Contracts提案(P2900R14)がC++26に向けて採択され、C++26では契約プログラミング機能を言語サポートの下で実践できるようになります。この記事は、その契約プログラミング機能の一部として導入されている違反ハンドラというものについてのお話です。 契約プログラミング機能における違反ハンドラの概要 ユーザー定義違反ハンドラ std::contracts::contract_violation より一般的な利用 外部ツールの共通コールバック機構として 実行時エラーハンドリングのコールバック機能として(P3290R2) プロファイル機能の実行時検査におけるコールバックとして(P3081R0) 未定義動作の実行時ハンドリング機能として(P3100R0, P3229R1, P3205R0) 参考文献 契約プログラミング機能における違反ハンドラの概要 C++26の契約プログラミング機能は

                                                    地面を見下ろす少年の足蹴にされる私
                                                  • Implement tcl in tcl

                                                    Maybe someone has already done this. But the question in my mind is how much of Tcl can be implimented in Tcl itself. Obviously you can't implement system calls in Tcl, but you could implement just about everthing else. What commands/parts of Tcl would be in the minimal set? Earl Johnson Minimal set"set" both scalar and array modes."eval" command"unknown" "string index" command"string length" comm

                                                    • JupyterLab Changelog — JupyterLab 4.5.0a3 documentation

                                                      JupyterLab Changelog# v4.4# JupyterLab 4.4 includes a number of new features (described below), bug fixes, and enhancements. This release is compatible with extensions supporting JupyterLab 4.0. Extension authors are encouraged to consult the Extension Migration Guide which lists deprecations and changes to the public API. Code console improvements# The code console prompt can now be positioned on

                                                      • Exhaustive Union Matching in Python - Preferred Networks Research & Development

                                                        Pattern matching on algebraic data types is a powerful technique to process a given input and many programming languages have adopted it in one way or another. A check on whether a given match is “exhaustive”, i.e., covers all possible inputs, is helpful to avoid bugs when the set of possible inputs is extended; for example, when new enumeration values are added. In this blog post I will first bri

                                                          Exhaustive Union Matching in Python - Preferred Networks Research & Development
                                                        • GTF :: Why Haskell?

                                                          “Impractical”, “academic”, “niche”. These are a few of the reactions I get when someone discovers that my favourite programming language is Haskell, and not only my favourite in some sort of intellectually-masturbatory way, but favourite for building things, real things, mostly involving web servers. Hobby projects would be one thing, but it gets worse: I have actual teams at Converge working in H

                                                          • Node.js

                                                            Notable Changes Experimental command-line argument parser API Adds util.parseArgs helper for higher level command-line argument parsing. Contributed by Benjamin Coe, John Gee, Darcy Clarke, Joe Sepi, Kevin Gibbons, Aaron Casanova, Jessica Nahulan, and Jordan Harband - #42675 Experimental ESM Loader Hooks API Node.js ESM Loader hooks now support multiple custom loaders, and composition is achieved

                                                              Node.js
                                                            • Django for Startup Founders: A better software architecture for SaaS startups and consumer apps

                                                              In an ideal world, startups would be easy. We'd run our idea by some potential customers, build the product, and then immediately ride that sweet exponential growth curve off into early retirement. Of course it doesn't actually work like that. Not even a little. In real life, even startups that go on to become billion-dollar companies typically go through phases like: Having little or no growth fo

                                                              • C++ safety, in context

                                                                Scope. To talk about C++’s current safety problems and solutions well, I need to include the context of the broad landscape of security and safety threats facing all software. I chair the ISO C++ standards committee and I work for Microsoft, but these are my personal opinions and I hope they will invite more dialog across programming language and security communities. Acknowledgments. Many thanks

                                                                  C++ safety, in context
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