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  • 関数名、メソッド名、変数名でよく使う英単語のまとめ

    プログラミングをしていると関数名、メソッド名、変数名をどうするか悩みます。 ロジックより命名に時間を費やすこともざらにあります。翻訳したり、一般的な命名規則なのかいつも検索して大変です。 よく使うサイトの内容をコピってメモしておく 関数名とメソッド名の違いについて よく使う英単語のまえに、いつもごっちゃにして使っているけど、定義はこんな感じ 「関数」と「メソッド」の違い 似ているところ どちらも何か(引数)を入れると処理をして何か(戻り値)を返してくれます。 違うところ やってること自体は大差ありません。概念としては違います。 メソッドはオブジェクト指向で登場する用語で、オブジェクトの動作を定義したものです。 まずオブジェクトありきなのですね。一方の関数は、オブジェクト云々は関係ありません。 個人的な使い分け Java で登場する関数は「メソッド」です。C 言語で登場する関数は「関数」と呼

      関数名、メソッド名、変数名でよく使う英単語のまとめ
    • 大実験!ChatGPTは競プロの問題を解けるのか (2024年5月版) - E869120's Blog

      1. はじめに 2024 年 5 月 14 日、OpenAI 社から新たな生成 AI「GPT-4o」が発表され、世界に大きな衝撃を与えました。これまでの GPT-4 よりも性能を向上させただけでなく1、音声や画像のリアルタイム処理も実現し、さらに応答速度が大幅に速くなりました。「ついにシンギュラリティが来てしまったか」「まるで SF の世界を生きているような感覚だ」という感想も見受けられました。 しかし、いくら生成 AI とはいえ、競技プログラミングの問題を解くのは非常に難しいです。なぜなら競技プログラミングでは、問題文を理解する能力、プログラムを実装する能力だけでなく、より速く答えを求められる解法 (アルゴリズム) を考える能力も要求されるからです。もし ChatGPT が競技プログラミングを出来るようになれば他のあらゆるタスクをこなせるだろう、と考える人もいます。 それでは、現代最強の

        大実験!ChatGPTは競プロの問題を解けるのか (2024年5月版) - E869120's Blog
      • Microsoft Power Automate DesktopでRPAを実現してみる | 🌴 officeの杜 🥥

        自分自身の個人的意見としては、エンドユーザコンピューティングは大いに結構だと思ってるけれど、一方で日本でジリジリと熱さが消えつつある国内の有象無象のRPAについては滅んだほうが良いとも思ってる。理由は後述するとして、本日良いニュースが発表されました。Power Automate Desktopについて追加費用無し無償で利用可能になるとのこと。これは既にあるMicrosoft365のEnterpriseプランなどに標準で利用できてるPower Automateのデスクトップ版のようで、Windows10に標準でついてくるようになるとのこと。 ということで、現時点のMicrosoft365で使えてるPower Automate Desktopを使ってみて、どんな感じなのか?またリリース後にその違いなどをここに記述していこうかなと思っています。また、Seleniumベースのウェブ自動化についても

          Microsoft Power Automate DesktopでRPAを実現してみる | 🌴 officeの杜 🥥
        • Performance comparison: counting words in Python, Go, C++, C, AWK, Forth, and Rust

          Performance comparison: counting words in Python, Go, C++, C, AWK, Forth, and Rust March 2021 Summary: I describe a simple interview problem (counting frequencies of unique words), solve it in various languages, and compare performance across them. For each language, I’ve included a simple, idiomatic solution as well as a more optimized approach via profiling. Go to: Constraints | Python Go C++ C

          • research!rsc: Coroutines for Go

            This post is about why we need a coroutine package for Go, and what it would look like. But first, what are coroutines? Every programmer today is familiar with function calls (subroutines): F calls G, which stops F and runs G. G does its work, potentially calling and waiting for other functions, and eventually returns. When G returns, G is gone and F continues running. In this pattern, only one fu

            • 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
              • ソースコード & ドキュメントに対応したGraph RAGの実装(Tree-sitter + LightRAG)

                (module (function_definition (identifier) # ← ここに関数名「sample_func」が含まれます (parameters) (block (expression_statement (call (identifier) (argument_list (string)))))) (expression_statement (call (identifier) (argument_list)))) ノードが色々取れましたが、「function_definition」が関数、その子である「identifier」が関数名を表すため、 function_definition == 子ノード ==> identifier となっている箇所を探索すれば抽出できます(関数ではあっても「lambda」など異なる場合もあります)。 今回は上記のようにTree-si

                  ソースコード & ドキュメントに対応したGraph RAGの実装(Tree-sitter + LightRAG)
                • 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

                  • 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
                    • Run WebAssemblies in VS Code for the Web

                      June 5, 2023 by Dirk Bäumer VS Code for the Web (https://vscode.dev) has been available for some time now and it has always been our goal to support the full edit / compile / debug cycle in the browser. This is relatively easy for languages like JavaScript and TypeScript since browsers ship with a JavaScript execution engine. It is harder for other languages since we must be able to execute (and t

                        Run WebAssemblies in VS Code for the Web
                      • Go performance from version 1.2 to 1.18

                        February 2022 Recently I improved the performance of GoAWK – my AWK interpreter written in Go – by switching from a tree-walking interpreter to a bytecode compiler with a virtual machine interpreter. While doing that, I thought it’d be interesting to see how much the performance of Go itself has improved over the years. There are many ways programs written in Go have gotten faster: the Go team and

                        • Logica

                          Logica is an open source declarative logic programming language for data manipulation. Logica extends syntax of logic programming for intuitive and efficient data manipulation. It compiles to SQL thus providing you access to the power of SQL engines with the convenience of logic programming syntax. Logica can compiles to SQL dialects of DuckDB, SQLite, Google BigQuery and Postgres. This makes it p

                            Logica
                          • Why Rust is the Future of Game Development | thefuntastic

                            Rust, not related to the video game also called Rust, is a promising systems programming language with novel features ideally suited for game development. Exposure and awareness within the game developer community, however, remains limited. In this post, I provide a gentle introduction to Rust and attempt to justify its place on your radar. A Short History Lesson​What is Rust, and where did it com

                            • Agents

                              Intelligent agents are considered by many to be the ultimate goal of AI. The classic book by Stuart Russell and Peter Norvig, Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach (Prentice Hall, 1995), defines the field of AI research as “the study and design of rational agents.” The unprecedented capabilities of foundation models have opened the door to agentic applications that were previously unimaginabl

                                Agents
                              • 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
                                • Prompt Engineering

                                  Date: March 15, 2023 | Estimated Reading Time: 21 min | Author: Lilian Weng Prompt Engineering, also known as In-Context Prompting, refers to methods for how to communicate with LLM to steer its behavior for desired outcomes without updating the model weights. It is an empirical science and the effect of prompt engineering methods can vary a lot among models, thus requiring heavy experimentation a

                                  • 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

                                    • 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

                                      • 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)
                                        • 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
                                          • How I developed a faster Ruby interpreter | Red Hat Developer

                                            In this article, I will describe my efforts to implement a faster interpreter for CRuby, the Ruby language interpreter, using a dynamically specialized internal representation (IR). I believe this article will interest developers trying to improve the interpreter performance of dynamic programming languages (e.g., CPython developers). I will cover the following topics: Existing CRuby interpreter a

                                              How I developed a faster Ruby interpreter | Red Hat Developer
                                            • 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

                                              • Implementing Logic Programming

                                                Most of my readers are probably familiar with procedural programming, object-oriented programming (OOP), and functional programming (FP). The majority of top programming languages on all of the language popularity charts (like TIOBE) support all three to some extent. Even if a programmer avoided one or more of those three paradigms like the plague, they’re likely at least aware of them and what th

                                                  Implementing Logic Programming
                                                • Understanding AWS Lambda Proactive Initialization

                                                  AWS Lambda warms up your functions, such that 50%-85% of Lambda Sandbox initializations don't increase latency for users. In this article we'll define Proactive Initialization, observe its frequency, and help you identify invocations where your cold starts weren't really that cold. July 13, 2023 This post is both longer and more popular than I anticipated, so I’ve decided to add a quick summary: T

                                                    Understanding AWS Lambda Proactive Initialization
                                                  • 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
                                                    • 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

                                                      • 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
                                                        • Little Languages Are The Future Of Programming

                                                          I’ve become convinced that “little languages”—small languages designed to solve very specific problems—are the future of programming, particularly after reading Gabriella Gonzalez’s The end of history for programming and watching Alan Kay’s Programming and Scaling talk. You should go check them out because they’re both excellent, but if you stick around I’ll explain just what I mean by “little lan

                                                            Little Languages Are The Future Of Programming
                                                          • Parsing Protobuf at 2+GB/s: How I Learned To Love Tail Calls in C

                                                            [Note: there have been several developments in this space since this article was published. See A Tail Calling Interpreter For Python (And Other Updates) for the latest information about this technique.] I just landed an exciting feature in the main branch of the Clang compiler. Using the [[clang::musttail]] or __attribute__((musttail)) statement attributes, you can now get guaranteed tail calls i

                                                            • 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

                                                              • Why pipes sometimes get "stuck": buffering

                                                                Here’s a niche terminal problem that has bothered me for years but that I never really understood until a few weeks ago. Let’s say you’re running this command to watch for some specific output in a log file: tail -f /some/log/file | grep thing1 | grep thing2 If log lines are being added to the file relatively slowly, the result I’d see is… nothing! It doesn’t matter if there were matches in the lo

                                                                • 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
                                                                  • Lean for JavaScript Developers — overreacted

                                                                    Lean for JavaScript DevelopersSeptember 2, 2025 This is my opinionated syntax primer for the Lean programming language. It is far from complete and may contain inaccuracies (I’m still learning Lean myself) but this is how I wish I was introduced to it, and what I wish was clarified. Why Lean? This post assumes you’re already eager to learn a bit of Lean. For motivation, I humbly submit to you two

                                                                      Lean for JavaScript Developers — overreacted
                                                                    • The Go Programming Language and Environment – Communications of the ACM

                                                                      Go is a programming language created at Google in late 2007 and released as open source in November 2009. Since then, it has operated as a public project, with contributions from thousands of individuals and dozens of companies. Go has become a popular language for building cloud infrastructure: Docker, a Linux container manager, and Kubernetes, a container deployment system, are core cloud techno

                                                                      • AWK As A Major Systems Programming Language — Revisited

                                                                        Preface ¶ I started this paper in 2013, and in 2015 sent it out for review to the people listed later on. After incorporating comments, I sent it to Rik Farrow, the editor of the USENIX magazine ;login: to see if he would publish it. He declined to do so, for reasonably good reasons. The paper languished, forgotten, until early 2018 when I came across it and decided to polish it off, put it up on

                                                                        • 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

                                                                          • 作りたいゲームを指示すると概念図を作ってから概念図に基づいてゲームの開発計画を立て、自動的にプログラミングするアプリを作ろうとした #GPTハッカソン24耐|shi3z

                                                                            作りたいゲームを指示すると概念図を作ってから概念図に基づいてゲームの開発計画を立て、自動的にプログラミングするアプリを作ろうとした #GPTハッカソン24耐 tldrawに影響されて、なんとかこの性質を応用できないか考えたところ、言葉から概念図をまず作り、それに基づいて計画を立て、長いプログラム(128Kトークンを活用)を書かせるようなアプリを作りました。 GPT4でDALL-Eのプロンプトを書き、DALL-Eが概念図を描き、それをGPT-4Vが読み込んで開発計画を立て、GPT-4がゲーム本体を生成するという段取りです。 例えばブロック崩しだとまず以下のようなプロンプトが生成されます。 DALL-E用のプロンプトは以下の通りです: "A sketch on a whiteboard illustrating the basic program structure and screen mo

                                                                              作りたいゲームを指示すると概念図を作ってから概念図に基づいてゲームの開発計画を立て、自動的にプログラミングするアプリを作ろうとした #GPTハッカソン24耐|shi3z
                                                                            • A Lisp Interpreter Implemented in Conway’s Game of Life

                                                                              Lisp in Life is a Lisp interpreter implemented in Conway’s Game of Life. The entire pattern is viewable on the browser here. To the best of my knowledge, this is the first time a high-level programming language was interpreted in Conway’s Game of Life. Running Lisp on the Game of Life Lisp is a language with a simple and elegant design, having an extensive ability to express sophisticated ideas as

                                                                                A Lisp Interpreter Implemented in Conway’s Game of Life
                                                                              • 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
                                                                                • How to write a linter using tree-sitter in an hour

                                                                                  This article was discussed on Hacker News. This is a continuation of my last post on how to write a tree-sitter grammar in an afternoon. Building on the grammar we wrote, now we’re going to write a linter for Imp, and it’s even easier! The final result clocks in less than 60 SLOC and can be found here. Recall that tree-sitter is an incremental parser generator. That is, you give it a description o