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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
    • The Prompt Engineering Playbook for Programmers

      Developers are increasingly relying on AI coding assistants to accelerate our daily workflows. These tools can autocomplete functions, suggest bug fixes, and even generate entire modules or MVPs. Yet, as many of us have learned, the quality of the AI’s output depends largely on the quality of the prompt you provide. In other words, prompt engineering has become an essential skill. A poorly phrased

        The Prompt Engineering Playbook for Programmers
      • GitHub - modelcontextprotocol/servers: Model Context Protocol Servers

        Official integrations are maintained by companies building production ready MCP servers for their platforms. 21st.dev Magic - Create crafted UI components inspired by the best 21st.dev design engineers. ActionKit by Paragon - Connect to 130+ SaaS integrations (e.g. Slack, Salesforce, Gmail) with Paragon’s ActionKit API. Adfin - The only platform you need to get paid - all payments in one place, in

          GitHub - modelcontextprotocol/servers: Model Context Protocol Servers
        • GPT in 60 Lines of NumPy | Jay Mody

          January 30, 2023 In this post, we'll implement a GPT from scratch in just 60 lines of numpy. We'll then load the trained GPT-2 model weights released by OpenAI into our implementation and generate some text. Note: This post assumes familiarity with Python, NumPy, and some basic experience with neural networks. This implementation is for educational purposes, so it's missing lots of features/improv

          • Announcing TypeScript 5.2 - TypeScript

            Today we’re excited to announce the release of TypeScript 5.2! If you’re not familiar with TypeScript, it’s a language that builds on top of JavaScript by making it possible to declare and describe types. Writing types in our code allows us to explain intent and have other tools check our code to catch mistakes like typos, issues with null and undefined, and more. Types also power TypeScript’s edi

              Announcing TypeScript 5.2 - TypeScript
            • Announcing TypeScript 5.2 RC - TypeScript

              Today we’re excited to announce our Release Candidate of TypeScript 5.2! Between now and the stable release of TypeScript 5.2, we expect no further changes apart from critical bug fixes. To get started using the RC, you can get it through NuGet, or through npm with the following command: npm install -D typescript@rc Here’s a quick list of what’s new in TypeScript 5.2! using Declarations and Explic

                Announcing TypeScript 5.2 RC - TypeScript
              • Why I use attrs instead of pydantic

                This post is an account of why I prefer using the attrs library over Pydantic. I'm writing it since I am often asked this question and I want to have something concrete to link to. This is not meant to be an objective comparison of attrs and Pydantic; I'm not interested in comparing bullet points of features, nor can I be unbiased since I'm a major contributor to attrs (at time of writing, second

                • ​Getting Started with Python

                  Python is a powerful programming language that provides many packages that we can use. Using the versatile Python programming language, we can develop the following: AutomationDesktop applicationAndroidWebIoT home automationData Science and the list goes on.In this article, our primary focus will be knowing how to start learning Python and the essentials required to be a data scientist. Below is t

                    ​Getting Started with Python
                  • Announcing TypeScript 5.2 Beta - TypeScript

                    Today we are excited to announce the availability of TypeScript 5.2 Beta. To get started using the beta, you can get it through NuGet, or through npm with the following command: npm install -D typescript@beta Here’s a quick list of what’s new in TypeScript 5.2! using Declarations and Explicit Resource Management Decorator Metadata Named and Anonymous Tuple Elements Easier Method Usage for Unions o

                      Announcing TypeScript 5.2 Beta - TypeScript
                    • 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
                      • 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

                        • Vim9 script for Python Developers · GitHub

                          vim9script4pythondevelopers.md Vim9 script for Python Developers Vim9 script�Vim script��������������������������������������������������系��� def������義����������Vim script��vim9script�����使����������(vim9script���

                            Vim9 script for Python Developers · GitHub
                          • Renato Athaydes

                            Revenge of Lisp (Part 1⁄2) Background vector created by upklyak - www.freepik.com This may surprise you if you know me, but I’ve been learning Common Lisp for a few weeks now. It all started when I was reading, funnily enough, a blog post about another, much more hyped, language called Julia. The post was titled Julia and the reincarnation of Lisp, and in it the author lamented that despite his lo

                            • Large Text Compression Benchmark

                               Large Text Compression Benchmark Matt Mahoney Last update: July 3, 2025. history This competition ranks lossless data compression programs by the compressed size (including the size of the decompression program) of the first 109 bytes of the XML text dump of the English version of Wikipedia on Mar. 3, 2006. About the test data. The goal of this benchmark is not to find the best overall compressi

                              • Building a type-safe dictionary in TypeScript - LogRocket Blog

                                Gapur Kassym I am a full-stack engineer and writer. I'm passionate about building excellent software that improves the lives of those around me. As a software engineer, I enjoy using my obsessive attention to detail and my unequivocal love for making things that change the world. Editor’s note: This article was last updated by Shalitha Suranga on 20 February 2024 to include advanced type checking

                                  Building a type-safe dictionary in TypeScript - LogRocket Blog
                                • How to Crawl the Web with Scrapy

                                  Web scraping is the process of downloading data from a public website. For example, you could scrape ESPN for stats of baseball players and build a model to predict a team’s odds of winning based on their players stats and win rates. Below are a few use-cases for web scraping. Monitoring the prices of your competitors for price matching (competitive pricing). Collecting statistics from various web

                                  • Fitting a Forth in 512 bytes

                                    Fitting a Forth in 512 bytes June 10, 2021 · 31 minute read This article is part of the Bootstrapping series, in which I start from a 512-byte seed and try to bootstrap a practical system. Software is full of circular dependencies if you look deep enough. Compilers written in the language they compile are the most obvious example, but not the only one. To compile a kernel, you need a running kerne

                                      Fitting a Forth in 512 bytes
                                    • The next generation of Data Platforms is the Data Mesh

                                      Here’s why. As enterprises become more agile, centralization appears more and more as a thing of the past world, a waterfall world. The same appears to be true with data platforms. Therefore, we are building a Data Mesh, this next generation of data platforms for PayPal Credit. This post details the evolution of data platforms, highlights their problems, and why we decided to build a Data Mesh. I

                                        The next generation of Data Platforms is the Data Mesh
                                      • 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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