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  • 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
    • 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

      • PHP is Legacy, in 2024

        A trained actor with a dissertation on standup comedy, I came into PHP development via the meetup scene. You can find me speaking and writing on tech, or playing/buying odd records from my vinyl collection. Ready to start building?Experience seamless connectivity, real-time messaging, and crystal-clear voice and video calls-all at your fingertips. Subscribe to Our Developer NewsletterSubscribe to

          PHP is Legacy, in 2024
        • 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
          • 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

              • 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

                • 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
                  • 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
                    • 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)
                      • February 2021 (version 1.54)

                        Join a VS Code Dev Days event near you to learn about AI-assisted development in VS Code. Update 1.54.1: The update addresses an issue with an extension dependency. Update 1.54.2: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.54.3: The update addresses this issue. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the February 2021 release of Vi

                          February 2021 (version 1.54)
                        • 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)
                          • Coroutines and effects

                            For the past few months I’ve been mulling over some things that Russell Johnston made me realize about the relationship between effect systems and coroutines. You can read more of his thoughts on this subject here, but he made me realize that effect systems (like that found in Koka) and coroutines (like Rust’s async functions or generators) are in some ways isomorphic to one another. I’ve been pon

                            • Why People are Angry over Go 1.23 Iterators - gingerBill

                              NOTE: This is based on, but completely rewritten, from a Twitter post: https://x.com/TheGingerBill/status/1802645945642799423 TL;DR It makes Go feel too “functional” rather than being an unabashed imperative language. I recently saw a post on Twitter showing the upcoming Go iterator design for Go 1.23 (August 2024). From what I can gather, many people seem to dislike the design. I wanted to give m

                              • Real-world gen AI use cases from the world's leading organizations | Google Cloud Blog

                                AI is here, AI is everywhere: Top companies, governments, researchers, and startups are already enhancing their work with Google's AI solutions. Published April 12, 2024; last updated October 9, 2025. A year and a half ago, during Google Cloud Next 24, we published this list for the first time. It numbered 101 entries. It felt like a lot at the time, and served as a showcase of how much momentum b

                                  Real-world gen AI use cases from the world's leading organizations | Google Cloud Blog
                                • 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

                                  • Maestro: Netflix’s Workflow Orchestrator

                                    By Jun He, Natallia Dzenisenka, Praneeth Yenugutala, Yingyi Zhang, and Anjali Norwood TL;DRWe are thrilled to announce that the Maestro source code is now open to the public! Please visit the Maestro GitHub repository to get started. If you find it useful, please give us a star. What is MaestroMaestro is a horizontally scalable workflow orchestrator designed to manage large-scale Data/ML workflows

                                      Maestro: Netflix’s Workflow Orchestrator
                                    • January 2024 (version 1.86)

                                      Version 1.106 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from October. Update 1.86.2: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.86.1: The update addresses these issues. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the January 2024 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll lik

                                        January 2024 (version 1.86)
                                      • Manus tools and prompts

                                        agent loop �� �p�� You are Manus, an AI agent created by the Manus team. You excel at the following tasks: 1. Information gathering, fact-checking, and documentation 2. Data processing, analysis, and visualization 3. Writing multi-chapter articles and in-depth research reports 4. Creating websites, applications, and tools 5. Using programming to solve various problems beyond development 6. Variou

                                          Manus tools and prompts
                                        • 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

                                          • 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
                                            • 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
                                              • Introducing PyTorch Monarch – PyTorch

                                                We now live in a world where ML workflows (pre-training, post training, etc) are heterogeneous, must contend with hardware failures, are increasingly asynchronous and highly dynamic. Traditionally, PyTorch has relied on an HPC-style  multi-controller model, where multiple copies of the same script are launched across different machines, each running its own instance of the application (often refer

                                                • January 2023 (version 1.75)

                                                  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 - Create and share profiles to configure extensions, settings, shortcuts, and more. VS

                                                    January 2023 (version 1.75)
                                                  • 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)
                                                    • Introducing Spin 2.0

                                                      The Fermyon team is proud to introduce Spin 2.0 — a new major release of Spin, the open source developer tool for building, distributing, and running WebAssembly (Wasm) applications in the cloud. Wasm is a technology that is making its way into more and more parts of modern computing — from browser applications, to plugin systems, IoT scenarios and more, and Spin makes it possible to build your se

                                                        Introducing Spin 2.0
                                                      • The AI-Native Software Engineer

                                                        An AI-native software engineer is one who deeply integrates AI into their daily workflow, treating it as a partner to amplify their abilities. This requires a fundamental mindset shift. Instead of thinking “AI might replace me” an AI-native engineer asks for every task: “Could AI help me do this faster, better, or differently?”. The mindset is optimistic and proactive - you see AI as a multiplier

                                                          The AI-Native Software Engineer
                                                        • 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
                                                          • PROJEKT: OVERFLOW

                                                            [PLAY WEB VERSION: ALONE] [PLAY WEB VERSION: WITH A FRIEND] [PRINT] [RULES] [SIMILAR PROJECTS] [SYMBOLS] [CREDITS] [CONTACT] [GAME HELPER ESP32 | MOBILE] [ASSEMBLY GUIDE] THE GAME I made this game to teach my daughter how buffer overflows work. My favorite part of comuting is looking at programs as something you can play with, and poke and twist and make it whatever you want. When your microwave o

                                                              PROJEKT: OVERFLOW
                                                            • 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

                                                              • Python behind the scenes #12: how async/await works in Python

                                                                Mark functions as async. Call them with await. All of a sudden, your program becomes asynchronous – it can do useful things while it waits for other things, such as I/O operations, to complete. Code written in the async/await style looks like regular synchronous code but works very differently. To understand how it works, one should be familiar with many non-trivial concepts including concurrency,

                                                                • A History of Clojure

                                                                  71 A History of Clojure RICH HICKEY, Cognitect, Inc., USA Shepherd: Mira Mezini, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany Clojure was designed to be a general-purpose, practical functional language, suitable for use by professionals wherever its host language, e.g., Java, would be. Initially designed in 2005 and released in 2007, Clojure is a dialect of Lisp, but is not a direct descendant of any

                                                                  • Do large language models understand us?

                                                                    DisclaimerThese are my own views, not necessarily those of my employer. SummaryLarge language models (LLMs) represent a major advance in artificial intelligence (AI), and in particular toward the goal of human-like artificial general intelligence (AGI). It’s sometimes claimed, though, that machine learning is “just statistics”, hence that progress in AI is illusory with regard to this grander ambi

                                                                      Do large language models understand us?
                                                                    • SIMD-friendly algorithms for substring searching

                                                                      Introduction Popular programming languages provide methods or functions which locate a substring in a given string. In C it is the function strstr, the C++ class std::string has the method find, Python's string has methods pos and index, and so on, so forth. All these APIs were designed for one-shot searches. During past decades several algorithms to solve this problem were designed, an excellent

                                                                      • 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
                                                                        • Python Interview Questions

                                                                          Here is a list of common Python interview questions with detailed answers to help you prepare for the interview as a Python developer. Python, with its versatile use cases and straightforward syntax, has seen its popularity growing continuously in software development, data science, artificial intelligence, and many other fields. As such, interviews for Python-related positions are designed not on

                                                                            Python Interview Questions
                                                                          • August 2025 (version 1.104)

                                                                            Join a VS Code Dev Days event near you to learn about AI-assisted development in VS Code. Release date: September 11, 2025 Update 1.104.1: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.104.2: The update addresses these issues. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the August 2025 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates

                                                                              August 2025 (version 1.104)
                                                                            • Following up on the Python JIT

                                                                              Performance of Python programs has been a major focus of development for the language over the last five years or so; the Faster CPython project has been a big part of that effort. One of its subprojects is to add an experimental just-in-time (JIT) compiler to the language; at last year's PyCon US, project member Brandt Bucher gave an introduction to the copy-and-patch JIT compiler. At PyCon US 20

                                                                              • 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
                                                                                • Linear-time parser combinators

                                                                                  My birthday just passed, and to relax I wrote a parser combinator library. Over the last few years, I have worked quite a bit with Ningning Xie and Jeremy Yallop on parser combinators, which has led to a family of parser combinators which have optimal linear-time performance in theory, and which are many times faster than lex+yacc in practice. But these use advanced multistage programming techniqu