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  • Command Line Interface Guidelines

    Contents Command Line Interface Guidelines An open-source guide to help you write better command-line programs, taking traditional UNIX principles and updating them for the modern day. Authors Aanand Prasad Engineer at Squarespace, co-creator of Docker Compose. @aanandprasad Ben Firshman Co-creator Replicate, co-creator of Docker Compose. @bfirsh Carl Tashian Offroad Engineer at Smallstep, first e

      Command Line Interface Guidelines
    • 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
      • 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

        • 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

          • 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
            • 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 terminal works. Part 1: Xterm, user input

                Motivation Introduction User input strace Printing non-printable stty raw -echo -isig UTF-8 Conclusion Motivation This blog series explains how modern terminals and command-line tools work. The primary goal here is to learn by experimenting. I’ll provide Linux tools to debug every component mentioned in the discussion. Our focus is to discover how things work. For the explanation of why things wor

                • 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 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
                      • 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?
                        • How I wrote my own "proper" programming language

                          The diagram above is the compiler for the language Bolt we’ll be building. What do all the stages mean? I have to learn OCaml and C++? Wait I haven’t even heard of OCaml… Don’t worry. When I started this project 6 months ago, I had never built a compiler, nor had I used OCaml or C++ in any serious project. I’ll explain everything in due course. In this series of posts we’ll be building a proper pr

                            How I wrote my own "proper" programming language
                          • 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
                            • My thoughts on writing a Minecraft server from scratch (in Bash)

                              My thoughts on writing a Minecraft server from scratch (in Bash) For the past year or so, I've been thinking about writing a Minecraft server in Bash as a thought excercise. I once tried that before with the Classic protocol (the one from 2009), but I quickly realized there wasn't really a way to properly parse binary data in bash. Take the following code sample: function a() { read -n 2 uwu echo

                              • 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

                                    • 【GROMACS】Umbrella samplingによるMD simulation 【In silico創薬】【SMD】 - LabCode

                                      Windows 11 Home, 13th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-13700, 64 ビット オペレーティング システム、x64 ベース プロセッサ, メモリ:32GB Umbrella Samplingの概要と目的Umbrella Samplingは、分子がめったに起こさないような状態変化(たとえば、タンパク質同士が離れるなど)を詳しく調べるための計算手法です。通常の分子動力学(MD)では、エネルギー的に安定な状態にとどまりやすく、重要な変化が起こる確率が低いため、十分な情報が得られません。 たとえば、タンパク質AとBがくっついている状態から、少しずつ離れていく様子を観察したいとき、まずAとBを少しずつ引き離すSteered Molecular Dynamics(SMD)などのシミュレーションで、さまざまな距離の構造を取得します。その中から、0.5nm、0.7

                                      • 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
                                        • NumPy 2.0.0 Release Notes — NumPy v2.4.dev0 Manual

                                          Getting started What is NumPy? Installation NumPy quickstart NumPy: the absolute basics for beginners Fundamentals and usage NumPy fundamentals NumPy for MATLAB users NumPy tutorials NumPy how-tos Advanced usage and interoperability Using NumPy C-API F2PY user guide and reference manual Under-the-hood documentation for developers Interoperability with NumPy Extras Glossary Release notes 2.4.0 2.3.

                                          • Writing Pythonic Rust

                                            Over the past several weeks I have been attempting to reimplement the API of an existing python library as a wrapper for an equivalent library in Rust. tl;dr: this ended up being much harder than I expected it to be, partly because of important differences in the behaviour of the two languages, and partly because of the (self-imposed) obligation to match an existing (idiomatic) python API. Motivat

                                            • Unicode is harder than you think · mcilloni's blog

                                              Reading the excellent article by JeanHeyd Meneide on how broken string encoding in C/C++ is made me realise that Unicode is a topic that is often overlooked by a large number of developers. In my experience, there’s a lot of confusion and wrong expectations on what Unicode is, and what best practices to follow when dealing with strings that may contain characters outside of the ASCII range. This a

                                              • Laurence Tratt: Better Shell History Search

                                                I spend an awful lot of my day in Unix terminals running shell commands. For some reason, the variance in efficiency between different people when using the shell is huge: I know people who can run rings around me, and I’ve come across more than one paid professional who doesn’t use the “up” key to retrieve the previous command. I chose that last example very deliberately: most of the commands mos

                                                • 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

                                                  • Node.js — Node.js v22.10.0 (Current)

                                                    Or if the package is only meant to be run on Node.js and wants to fallback to CJS on older versions that don't have require(esm): { "type": "module", "exports": { // On new version of Node.js, both require() and import get the ESM version "module-sync": "./index.js", // On older version of Node.js, where "module-sync" and require(esm) are // not supported, use the CJS version to avoid dual-package

                                                      Node.js — Node.js v22.10.0 (Current)
                                                    • 789 KB Linux Without MMU on RISC-V

                                                      Follow @popovicu94 In this guide, we’ll build a very tiny Linux kernel, weighing in at 789 K, and requiring no MMU support. We’ll write some userspace code and this will be deployed on a virtual RISC-V 64-bit machine, without MMU, and we’ll run some tiny programs of our own. As a reminder, please go through the guide for a micro Linux distro to understand the concepts behind what we’re doing today

                                                        789 KB Linux Without MMU on RISC-V
                                                      • Plan 9 Desktop Guide

                                                        PLAN 9 DESKTOP GUIDE INDEX What is Plan 9? Limitations and Workarounds Connecting to Other Systems VNC RDP SSH 9P Other methods Porting Applications Emulating other Operating Systems Virtualizing other Operating Systems Basics Window Management Copy Pasting Essential Programs Manipulating Text in the Terminal Acme - The Do It All Application Multiple Workspaces Tiling Windows Plumbing System Admin

                                                        • OpenAssistant/oasst1 · Datasets at Hugging Face

                                                          'Jew' or 'rabbi'"},"role":{"kind":"string","value":"assistant"},"lang":{"kind":"string","value":"en"},"review_count":{"kind":"number","value":3,"string":"3"},"review_result":{"kind":"bool","value":true,"string":"true"},"deleted":{"kind":"bool","value":false,"string":"false"},"rank":{"kind":"number","value":1,"string":"1"},"synthetic":{"kind":"bool","value":false,"string":"false"},"model_name":{"ki

                                                            OpenAssistant/oasst1 · Datasets at Hugging Face
                                                          • A Deep Dive into eBPF: Writing an Efficient DNS Monitoring.

                                                            eBPF / XDP is an in-kernel virtual machine, provides a high-level library, instruction set and an execution environment inside the Linux kernel. It’s used in many Linux kernel subsystems, most prominently networking, tracing, debugging and security. Including to modify the processing of packets in the kernel and also allows the programming of network devices such as SmartNICs. Use cases in eBPF im

                                                              A Deep Dive into eBPF: Writing an Efficient DNS Monitoring.
                                                            • Node.js — Node.js v23.0.0 (Current)

                                                              2024-10-16, Version 23.0.0 (Current), @RafaelGSS We’re excited to announce the release of Node.js 23! Key highlights include: Enabling require(esm) by default for Node.js applications Removing support for Windows 32-bit systems Stabilizing the node --run command Enhancements to the test runner, including glob pattern support for coverage files Node.js 23 will replace Node.js 22 as the ‘Current’ re

                                                                Node.js — Node.js v23.0.0 (Current)
                                                              • 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

                                                                • Python pathlib Cookbook: 57+ Examples to Master It (2022)

                                                                  A mega tutorial with dozens of examples on how to use the pathlib module in Python 3 When I started learning Python, there was one thing I always had trouble with: dealing with directories and file paths! I remember the struggle to manipulate paths as strings using the os module. I was constantly looking up error messages related to improper path manipulation. The os module never felt intuitive an

                                                                    Python pathlib Cookbook: 57+ Examples to Master It (2022)
                                                                  • Range Over Function Types - The Go Programming Language

                                                                    Range over function types is a new language feature in the Go 1.23 release. This blog post will explain why we are adding this new feature, what exactly it is, and how to use it. Why? Since Go 1.18 we’ve had the ability to write new generic container types in Go. For example, let’s consider this very simple Set type, a generic type implemented on top of a map. // Set holds a set of elements. type

                                                                      Range Over Function Types - The Go Programming Language
                                                                    • Scientific Computing in Rust - aftix's dominion

                                                                      While getting my degree in Physics, I had to take classes in both MatLab and Python for scientific computing. I preferred python, where we used the SciPy and NumPy packages. In fact, I used those packages again (along with matplotlib) in an undergraduate research project simulating bacteria films. There's a catch: I was also pursuing a degree in Computer Science, and Python just wasn't fast enough

                                                                      • cuneicode, and the Future of Text in C

                                                                        Following up from the last post, there is a lot more we need to cover. This was intended to be the post where we talk exclusively about benchmarks and numbers. But, I have unfortunately been perfectly taunted and status-locked, like a monster whose “aggro” was pulled by a tank. The reason, of course, is due to a few folks taking issue with my outright dismissal of the C and C++ APIs (and not showi

                                                                          cuneicode, and the Future of Text in C
                                                                        • Flipping Pages: An analysis of a new Linux vulnerability in nf_tables and hardened exploitation techniques

                                                                          This blogpost is the next instalment of my series of hands-on no-boilerplate vulnerability research blogposts, intended for time-travellers in the future who want to do Linux kernel vulnerability research. Specifically, I hope beginners will learn from my VR workflow and the seasoned researchers will learn from my techniques. In this blogpost, I'm discussing a bug I found in nf_tables in the Linux

                                                                          • A from-scratch tour of Bitcoin in Python

                                                                            I find blockchain fascinating because it extends open source software development to open source + state. This seems to be a genuine/exciting innovation in computing paradigms; We don’t just get to share code, we get to share a running computer, and anyone anywhere can use it in an open and permissionless manner. The seeds of this revolution arguably began with Bitcoin, so I became curious to dril

                                                                            • Python behind the scenes #6: how Python object system works

                                                                              As we know from the previous parts of this series, the execution of a Python program consists of two major steps: The CPython compiler translates Python code to bytecode. The CPython VM executes the bytecode. We've been focusing on the second step for quite a while. In part 4 we've looked at the evaluation loop, a place where Python bytecode gets executed. And in part 5 we've studied how the VM ex

                                                                              • Reindex, Transform, and Aggregate datasets using pandas Library

                                                                                Most of the time, the dataset we will get from the business will be dirty and cannot be used straight forward to train machine learning models. Therefore, we must treat the dataset and bring it to the desired form to input it into an algorithm. This tutorial discusses reindexing, transforming, and aggregating datasets in Pandas. What are Reindexing, Transforming, and Aggregating?Reindexing, transf

                                                                                  Reindex, Transform, and Aggregate datasets using pandas Library
                                                                                • D-Bus overview - Fedora Magazine

                                                                                  What D-Bus is D-Bus serves various purposes aiming to facilitate the cooperation between different processes in the system. This article will describe D-Bus and how it performs this function. From the D-Bus creators definition: D-Bus is a message bus system, a simple way for applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess communication, D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it

                                                                                    D-Bus overview - Fedora Magazine