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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
    • プロと読み解く Ruby 3.0 NEWS - クックパッド開発者ブログ

      技術部の笹田(ko1)と遠藤(mame)です。クックパッドで Ruby (MRI: Matz Ruby Implementation、いわゆる ruby コマンド) の開発をしています。お金をもらって Ruby を開発しているのでプロの Ruby コミッタです。 本日 12/25 に、ついに Ruby 3.0.0 がリリースされました。一昨年、昨年に続き、今年も Ruby 3.0 の NEWS.md ファイルの解説をします。NEWS ファイルとは何か、は一昨年の記事を見てください(なお Ruby 3.0.0 から、NEWS.md にファイル名を変えました)。 プロと読み解く Ruby 2.6 NEWS ファイル - クックパッド開発者ブログ プロと読み解くRuby 2.7 NEWS - クックパッド開発者ブログ Ruby 3.0 は、Ruby にとってほぼ 8 年ぶりのメジャーバージョンア

        プロと読み解く Ruby 3.0 NEWS - クックパッド開発者ブログ
      • Hacking the JavaScript Lottery

        January 2016 boasted a Powerball jackpot of 1.5 billion dollars. This generated a lot of interest in the lottery and the Los Angeles Times released a simulator where you start with 100 dollars and play until that is gone. I had seen previous work for predicting Java’s Math.random() and thought it would be a fun project to replicate for the browser. The first step is to find the algorithm used in t

          Hacking the JavaScript Lottery
        • 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

          • 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

            • Changing std::sort at Google’s Scale and Beyond

              TL;DR; We are changing std::sort in LLVM’s libcxx. That’s a long story of what it took us to get there and all possible consequences, bugs you might encounter with examples from open source. We provide some benchmarks, perspective, why we did this in the first place and what it cost us with exciting ideas from Hyrum’s Law to reinforcement learning. All changes went into open source and thus I can

                Changing std::sort at Google’s Scale and Beyond
              • Gamedev in Lisp. Part 1: ECS and Metalinguistic Abstraction - cl-fast-ecs by Andrew

                Gamedev in Lisp. Part 1: ECS and Metalinguistic Abstraction In this series of tutorials, we will delve into creating simple 2D games in Common Lisp. The result of the first part will be a development environment setup and a basic simulation displaying a 2D scene with a large number of physical objects. It is assumed that the reader is familiar with some high-level programming language, has a gener

                  Gamedev in Lisp. Part 1: ECS and Metalinguistic Abstraction - cl-fast-ecs by Andrew
                • Onyx, a new programming language powered by WebAssembly · Blog · Wasmer

                  Onyx, a new programming language powered by WebAssemblyLearn about Onyx, a new imperative programming language that leverages WebAssembly and Wasmer for seamless cross-platform support What is Onyx? Onyx is a new programming language featuring a modern, expressive syntax, strict type safety, blazingly-fast build times, and out-of-the-box cross platform support thanks to WebAssembly. Over the past

                    Onyx, a new programming language powered by WebAssembly · Blog · Wasmer
                  • RFC 9562: Universally Unique IDentifiers (UUIDs)

                     Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) K. Davis Request for Comments: 9562 Cisco Systems Obsoletes: 4122 B. Peabody Category: Standards Track Uncloud ISSN: 2070-1721 P. Leach University of Washington May 2024 Universally Unique IDentifiers (UUIDs) Abstract This specification defines UUIDs (Universally Unique IDentifiers) -- also known as GUIDs (Globally Unique IDentifiers) -- and a Uniform Resou

                      RFC 9562: Universally Unique IDentifiers (UUIDs)
                    • 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

                      • 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
                          • Python's "Type Hints" are a bit of a disappointment to me

                            blog - git - desktop - images - contact Python's "Type Hints" are a bit of a disappointment to me 2022-04-21 Preface You are reading version 2.0 of this blog post. I've incorporated some feedback I got into this revised version. Introduction Over the course of several Python 3.x versions, "type hints" were introduced. You can now annotate functions: def greeting(name: str) -> str: return 'Hello '

                            • 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

                              • 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

                                • The joy of building a ray tracer, for fun, in Rust. // flurries of latent creativity

                                  TLDR? You can find the code and a bunch of examples on GitHub at dps/rust-raytracer. Over the holiday break, I decided to learn Rust. Rust is a modern systems programming language which has a really interesting type system. The type system can catch broad classes of common programming mistakes - e.g. ensuring memory is accessed safely - at compile time while generating tight, performant machine co

                                    The joy of building a ray tracer, for fun, in Rust. // flurries of latent creativity
                                  • What's new in Python 3.11?

                                    What's new in Python 3.11?Built-in TOML support, better exceptions, and typing improvements. By Tushar·InsightsPython The first beta release of Python 3.11 is out, bringing some fascinating features for us to tinker with. This is what you can expect to see in 2022's release of Python later this year. Even better error messagesPython 3.10 gave us better error messages in various regards, but Python

                                      What's new in Python 3.11?
                                    • Examples of floating point problems

                                      January 13, 2023 Hello! I’ve been thinking about writing a zine about how things are represented on computers in bytes, so I was thinking about floating point. I’ve heard a million times about the dangers of floating point arithmetic, like: addition isn’t associative (x + (y + z) is different from (x + y) + z) if you add very big values to very small values, you can get inaccurate results (the sma

                                      • 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

                                        • Accelerating Generative AI with PyTorch II: GPT, Fast – PyTorch

                                          Blog Accelerating Generative AI with PyTorch II: GPT, Fast This post is the second part of a multi-series blog focused on how to accelerate generative AI models with pure, native PyTorch. We are excited to share a breadth of newly released PyTorch performance features alongside practical examples to see how far we can push PyTorch native performance. In part one, we showed how to accelerate Segmen

                                            Accelerating Generative AI with PyTorch II: GPT, Fast – PyTorch
                                          • 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
                                            • So You Want To Remove The GVL?

                                              I want to write a post about Pitchfork, explaining where it comes from, why it is like it is, and how I see its future. But before I can get to that, I think I need to share my mental model on a few things, in this case, Ruby’s GVL. For quite a long time, it has been said that Rails applications are mostly IO-bound, hence Ruby’s GVL isn’t that big of a deal and that has influenced the design of so

                                              • Tips on Adding JSON Output to Your CLI App - Brazil's Blog

                                                Brazil's Blog Musings on automation, scripting, programing, DevOps, and cybersecurity A couple of years ago I wrote a somewhat controversial article on the topic of Bringing the Unix Philosophy to the 21st Century by adding a JSON output option to CLI tools. This allows easier parsing in scripts by using JSON parsing tools like jq, jello, jp, etc. without arcane awk, sed, cut, tr, reverse, etc. in

                                                  Tips on Adding JSON Output to Your CLI App - Brazil's Blog
                                                • 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
                                                  • ​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
                                                    • 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

                                                      • The Art and Mathematics of Genji-Kō - OranLooney.com

                                                        The Art and Mathematics of Genji-Kō by Oran Looney November 26, 2024 Math Visualization History Python You might think it’s unlikely for any interesting mathematics to arise from incense appreciation, but that’s only because you’re unfamiliar with the peculiar character of Muromachi (室町) era Japanese nobles. There has never been a group of people, in any time or place, who were so driven to displa

                                                        • Accelerate Python code 100x by import taichi as ti | Taichi Docs

                                                          Python has become the most popular language in many rapidly evolving sectors, such as deep learning and data sciences. Yet its easy readability comes at the cost of performance. Of course, we all complain about program performance from time to time, and Python should certainly not take all the blame. Still, it's fair to say that Python's nature as an interpreted language does not help, especially

                                                          • Python behind the scenes #13: the GIL and its effects on Python multithreading

                                                            As you probably know, the GIL stands for the Global Interpreter Lock, and its job is to make the CPython interpreter thread-safe. The GIL allows only one OS thread to execute Python bytecode at any given time, and the consequence of this is that it's not possible to speed up CPU-intensive Python code by distributing the work among multiple threads. This is, however, not the only negative effect of

                                                            • 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

                                                              • Lesser Known PostgreSQL Features

                                                                In 2006 Microsoft conducted a customer survey to find what new features users want in new versions of Microsoft Office. To their surprise, more than 90% of what users asked for already existed, they just didn't know about it. To address the "discoverability" issue, they came up with the "Ribbon UI" that we know from Microsoft Office products today. Office is not unique in this sense. Most of us ar

                                                                  Lesser Known PostgreSQL Features
                                                                • Manuel Cerón

                                                                  Last year I finally decided to learn some Rust. The official book by Steve Klabnik and Carol Nichols is excellent, but even after reading it and working on some small code exercises, I felt that I needed more to really understand the language. I wanted to work on a small project to get some hands-on experience, but most of my ideas didn’t feel very well suited for Rust. Then I started reading the

                                                                  • GIMP - Development version: GIMP 2.99.12 Released

                                                                    GIMP 2.99.12 is a huge milestone towards GIMP 3.0. Many of the missing pieces are getting together, even though it is still a work in progress. As usual, issues are expected and in particular in this release which got important updates in major areas, such as canvas interaction code, scripts, but also theming… “CMYK space invasion”, by Jehan (based on GPLv3 code screencast), Creative Commons by-sa

                                                                      GIMP - Development version: GIMP 2.99.12 Released
                                                                    • graphql-rubyのN+1を遅延ロードで解決する | VISITS TechBlog

                                                                      技術開発部で主にバックエンド開発をしている浜田(@hamchance0215)です。 現在開発中のプロダクトのバックエンドはRails + graphql-rubyを使っています。 GraphQLを使った際のデメリットとしてN+1が発生しやすいということがよく言われます。 弊社でも例外ではなく、随所でN+1が発生していました。 今まではフロントエンドからの使われ方を考慮して、サクッと実装できる先読み(preload等)でN+1を回避していたのですが、クエリー数が増加したことでクエリーごとに使われ方を把握するのは難しくなってきたのと、同じクエリーであったとしても使われ方が多様化して先読みでは非効率になることが懸念されました(先読みが非効率になる件は後述します)。 そこで重い腰をあげて、遅延ロードを導入するために調査を行うことにしました。 ※この記事は執筆時点(2021/06)の情報で記載され

                                                                        graphql-rubyのN+1を遅延ロードで解決する | VISITS TechBlog
                                                                      • 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

                                                                        • PySkyWiFi: completely free, unbelievably stupid wi-fi on long-haul flights | Robert Heaton

                                                                          The plane reached 10,000ft. I took out my laptop, planning to peruse the internet and maybe do a little work if I got really desperate. I connected to the in-flight wi-fi and opened my browser. The network login page demanded credit card details. I fumbled for my card, which I eventually discovered had hidden itself inside my passport. As I searched I noticed that the login page was encouraging me

                                                                            PySkyWiFi: completely free, unbelievably stupid wi-fi on long-haul flights | Robert Heaton
                                                                          • 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
                                                                            • Past, Present, and Future of Sorbet Type Syntax – Jake Zimmerman

                                                                              Here’s the elephant in the room: Sorbet’s syntax is ugly. When people start complaining about Sorbet’s syntax, I have to spend a lot of time deflecting or even defending it, which is annoying: I’m right there with you, the syntax is ugly! It’s verbose. It’s foreign. It doesn’t resemble any typed language, nor does it complement Ruby’s unique style. My counter is that when it comes to language desi

                                                                              • August 2021 (version 1.60)

                                                                                Join a VS Code Dev Days event near you to learn about AI-assisted development in VS Code. Update 1.60.1: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.60.2: The update addresses these issues. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the August 2021 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you w

                                                                                  August 2021 (version 1.60)
                                                                                • The Best GPUs for Deep Learning in 2023 — An In-depth Analysis

                                                                                  Deep learning is a field with intense computational requirements, and your choice of GPU will fundamentally determine your deep learning experience. But what features are important if you want to buy a new GPU? GPU RAM, cores, tensor cores, caches? How to make a cost-efficient choice? This blog post will delve into these questions, tackle common misconceptions, give you an intuitive understanding

                                                                                    The Best GPUs for Deep Learning in 2023 — An In-depth Analysis