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  • 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
    • 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

      • 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)
        • 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

          • 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
            • 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
              • June 2023 (version 1.80)

                Update 1.80.1: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.80.2: The update addresses this security issue. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the June 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: Accessibility improvements - Accessible V

                  June 2023 (version 1.80)
                • 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
                  • July 2022 (version 1.70)

                    Join a VS Code Dev Days event near you to learn about AI-assisted development in VS Code. Update 1.70.1: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.70.2: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.70.3: This update is only available for Windows 7 users and is the last release supporting Windows 7. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welc

                      July 2022 (version 1.70)
                    • We mourn our craft

                      7 Feb We mourn our craft Posted February 7, 2026 by Nolan Lawson in software engineering. Tagged: AI. 63 Comments I didn’t ask for this and neither did you. I didn’t ask for a robot to consume every blog post and piece of code I ever wrote and parrot it back so that some hack could make money off of it. I didn’t ask for the role of a programmer to be reduced to that of a glorified TSA agent, revie

                      • 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
                        • Frozen String Literals: Past, Present, Future?

                          If you are a Rubyist, you’ve likely been writing # frozen_string_literal: true at the top of most of your Ruby source code files, or at the very least, that you’ve seen it in some other projects. Based on informal discussions at conferences and online, it seems that what this magic comment really is about is not always well understood, so I figured it would be worth talking about why it’s there, w

                          • A Small Guide for Naming Stuff in Front-end Code

                            Reading Time: 9 minutes Phil Karlton has famously said that the two hardest things in computer science are naming things and cache invalidation1. That’s still kinda true in front-end development. Naming stuff is hard, and so is changing a class name when your stylesheet is cached. For quite a few years, I’ve had a gist called “Tiny Rules for How to Name Stuff.” Which is what you think: little tiny

                              A Small Guide for Naming Stuff in Front-end Code
                            • 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)
                              • What's new in Swift 5.5?

                                What's new in Swift 5.5? Async/await, actors, throwing properties, and more! Swift 5.5 comes with a massive set of improvements – async/await, actors, throwing properties, and many more. For the first time it’s probably easier to ask “what isn’t new in Swift 5.5” because so much is changing. In this article I’m going to walk through each of the changes with code samples, so you can see how each of

                                  What's new in Swift 5.5?
                                • Expert used ChatGPT-4o to create a replica of his passport in just 5 minutes bypassing KYC

                                  SECURITY AFFAIRS MALWARE NEWSLETTER ROUND 41 | Security Affairs newsletter Round 519 by Pierluigi Paganini – INTERNATIONAL EDITION | China admitted its role in Volt Typhoon cyberattacks on U.S. infrastructure | Symbolic Link trick lets attackers bypass FortiGate patches, Fortinet warns | Attackers are exploiting recently disclosed OttoKit WordPress plugin flaw | Laboratory Services Cooperative dat

                                    Expert used ChatGPT-4o to create a replica of his passport in just 5 minutes bypassing KYC
                                  • If Not React, Then What? - Infrequently Noted

                                    Over the past decade, my work has centred on partnering with teams to build ambitious products for the web across both desktop and mobile. This has provided a ring-side seat to a sweeping variety of teams, products, and technology stacks across more than 100 engagements. While I'd like to be spending most of this time working through improvements to web APIs, the majority of time spent with partne

                                      If Not React, Then What? - Infrequently Noted
                                    • A History of the Future, 2025-2040 — LessWrong

                                      This is an all-in-one crosspost of a scenario I originally published in three parts on my blog, No Set Gauge. Links to the originals: A History of the Future, 2025-2027A History of the Future, 2027-2030A History of the Future, 2030-2040 Thanks to Luke Drago, Duncan McClements, Theo Horsley, and Bilal Chughtai for comments. 2025-2027Below is part 1 of an extended scenario describing how the future

                                        A History of the Future, 2025-2040 — LessWrong
                                      • 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
                                        • Casual Parsing in JavaScript | Brandon's Website

                                          Casual Parsing in JavaScript August 16, 2021 Over the last year and a half I've gotten really into writing parsers and parser-adjacent things like interpreters, transpilers, etc. I've done most of these projects in JavaScript, and I've settled into a nice little pattern that I re-use across projects. I wanted to share it because I think it's neat, and it's brought me joy, and it could be an intere

                                          • Optimizing Ruby’s JSON, Part 3

                                            In the previous post, I covered how I reimplemented JSON::Generator::State#configure in Ruby and some other changes. Unfortunately, it didn’t go as well as I initially thought. Mistakes Were Made The default gems that ship with Ruby are automatically copied inside ruby/ruby’s repo. In short, there’s a bot aptly named matzbot, that replicates all the commits from the various ruby/* gems, inside rub

                                            • GitHub - ComfyUI-Workflow/awesome-comfyui: A collection of awesome custom nodes for ComfyUI

                                              ComfyUI-Gemini_Flash_2.0_Exp (⭐+172): A ComfyUI custom node that integrates Google's Gemini Flash 2.0 Experimental model, enabling multimodal analysis of text, images, video frames, and audio directly within ComfyUI workflows. ComfyUI-ACE_Plus (⭐+115): Custom nodes for various visual generation and editing tasks using ACE_Plus FFT Model. ComfyUI-Manager (⭐+113): ComfyUI-Manager itself is also a cu

                                                GitHub - ComfyUI-Workflow/awesome-comfyui: A collection of awesome custom nodes for ComfyUI
                                              • 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

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