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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
    • Minimal safe Bash script template

      Published on December 14, 2020   ·   Updated on December 16, 2020 Bash scripts. Almost anyone needs to write one sooner or later. Almost no one says “yeah, I love writing them”. And that’s why almost everyone is putting low attention while writing them. I won’t try to make you a Bash expert (since I’m not a one either), but I will show you a minimal template that will make your scripts safer. You

        Minimal safe Bash script template
      • 「Postgres で試した?」と聞き返せるようになるまでもしくはなぜ私は雰囲気で技術を語るのか? — Just use Postgres 読書感想文 - じゃあ、おうちで学べる

        はじめに 「Just use Postgres」という言葉を初めて聞いたのは、いつだったか覚えていません。Twitter か Hacker News か、あるいは社内の Slack か。どこで聞いたにせよ、私の反応は決まっていました。「また極端なことを言う人がいる」と。 「それ、〇〇でもできますよ」——この手のフレーズはもう100回は聞いてきました。そして大抵の場合、その〇〇は専用ツールに置き換えられていきます。技術が専門分化していくのは自然な流れです。 全文検索なら Elasticsearch。時系列データなら InfluxDB。メッセージキューなら RabbitMQ。それぞれの分野に専門家がいて、専用のソリューションがあって、ベストプラクティスがあります。「とりあえず Postgres で」なんて、それは思考停止ではないか、と。でも、心のどこかで気になっていたんです。 www.mann

          「Postgres で試した?」と聞き返せるようになるまでもしくはなぜ私は雰囲気で技術を語るのか? — Just use Postgres 読書感想文 - じゃあ、おうちで学べる
        • 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
          • Building a tiny Linux from scratch

            Last week, I built a tiny Linux system from scratch, and booted it on my laptop! Here’s what it looked like: Let me tell you how I got there. I wanted to learn more about how the Linux kernel works, and what’s involved in booting it. So I set myself the goal to cobble together the bare neccessities required to boot into a working shell. In the end, I had a tiny Linux system with a size of 2.5 MB,

              Building a tiny Linux from scratch
            • OpenAI API ドキュメント 日本語訳|#2 GET STARTED 後編|ゑぐみかるちゃあ

              OpenAI API ドキュメントの日本語訳をこちらでまとめます。文字量の多いドキュメントなので、セクションごとに記事を分割しています。 今回は「GET STARTED 」のセクションからLibraries 、Models、TutorialsそしてUsage policiesを抜粋した後編です。 基本 DeepLで翻訳して、気になるところだけ書き換えています(ほぼ気になるところがないのが、DeepLのすごいところ)。原文との突き合わせができるようにはじめに原文を入れてますので、間違いなど見つけられましたら、ぜひご指摘ください。ご指摘箇所は随時反映させていただきます。 原文のリンクが有効になってますので、それぞれ必要な場合は原文リンクの方を参照ください。 前回のおさらいはこちら Python library|Python ライブラリWe provide a Python library, w

                OpenAI API ドキュメント 日本語訳|#2 GET STARTED 後編|ゑぐみかるちゃあ
              • プロと読み解く Ruby 3.1 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 3.1.0 がリリースされました(Ruby 3.1.0 リリース )。今年も Ruby 3.1 の NEWS.md ファイルの解説をします。NEWS ファイルとは何か、は以前の記事を見てください。 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 プロと読み解くRuby 3.0 NEWS - クックパッド開発者ブログ 本記事は新機能を解説することもさることながら、変更が入った背景や苦労な

                  プロと読み解く Ruby 3.1 NEWS - クックパッド開発者ブログ
                • Building a highly-available web service without a database

                  If you’ve ever built a web service or a web app, you know the drill: pick a database, pick a web service framework (and in today’s day and age, pick a front-end framework, but let’s not get into that). This has been the case for several decades now, and people don’t stop to question if this is still the best way to build a web app. Many things have changed in the last decade: Disk is a lot faster

                    Building a highly-available web service without a database
                  • Don't write clean code, write CRISP code — Bitfield Consulting

                    I’m sure we’re all in favour of “clean code”, but it’s one of those motherhood-and-apple-pie things that no one can reasonably disagree with. Who wants to write dirty code, unless maybe it’s for a porn site? The problem, of course, is that few of us can agree on what “clean code” means, and how to get there. A rule like “methods should only do one thing”, looks great on a T-shirt, but it’s not so

                      Don't write clean code, write CRISP code — Bitfield Consulting
                    • 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
                      • Building A Virtual Machine inside ChatGPT

                        Unless you have been living under a rock, you have heard of this new ChatGPT assistant made by OpenAI. You might be aware of its capabilities for solving IQ tests, tackling leetcode problems or to helping people write LateX. It is an amazing resource for people to retrieve all kinds of information and solve tedious tasks, like copy-writing! Today, Frederic Besse told me that he managed to do somet

                          Building A Virtual Machine inside ChatGPT
                        • Fish 4.0: The Fish Of Theseus

                          About two years ago, our head maintainer @ridiculousfish opened what quickly became our most-read pull request: #9512 - Rewrite it in Rust Truth be told, we did not quite expect that to be as popular as it was. It was written as a bit of an in-joke for the fish developers first, and not really as a press release to be shared far and wide. We didn’t post it anywhere, but other people did, and we go

                          • Omakub

                            Turn a fresh Ubuntu installation into a fully-configured, beautiful, and modern web development system by running a single command. That’s the one-line pitch for Omakub. No need to write bespoke configs for every essential tool just to get started or to be up on all the latest command-line tools. Omakub is an opinionated take on what Linux can be at its best. Omakub includes a curated set of appli

                              Omakub
                            • How I Hacked my Car

                              Note: As of 2022/10/25 the information in this series is slightly outdated. See Part 5 for more up to date information. The Car⌗ Last summer I bought a 2021 Hyundai Ioniq SEL. It is a nice fuel-efficient hybrid with a decent amount of features like wireless Android Auto/Apple CarPlay, wireless phone charging, heated seats, & a sunroof. One thing I particularly liked about this vehicle was the In-V

                              • Your URL Is Your State

                                Couple of weeks ago when I was publishing The Hidden Cost of URL Design I needed to add SQL syntax highlighting. I headed to PrismJS website trying to remember if it should be added as a plugin or what. I was overwhelmed with the amount of options in the download page so I headed back to my code. I checked the file for PrismJS and at the top of the file, I found a comment containing a URL: /* http

                                • 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
                                  • Mojo may be the biggest programming language advance in decades – fast.ai

                                    I remember the first time I used the v1.0 of Visual Basic. Back then, it was a program for DOS. Before it, writing programs was extremely complex and I’d never managed to make much progress beyond the most basic toy applications. But with VB, I drew a button on the screen, typed in a single line of code that I wanted to run when that button was clicked, and I had a complete application I could now

                                      Mojo may be the biggest programming language advance in decades – fast.ai
                                    • 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

                                      • copilot-explorer

                                        Copilot Internals | thakkarparth007.github.io Github Copilot has been incredibly useful to me. It can often magically read my mind and make useful suggestions. The thing that surprised me the most was its ability to correctly “guess” functions/variables from surrounding code – including from other files. This can only happen, if the copilot extension sends valuable information from surrounding cod

                                        • Scaling containers on AWS in 2022

                                          This all started with a blog post back in 2020, from a tech curiosity: what's the fastest way to scale containers on AWS? Is ECS faster than EKS? What about Fargate? Is there a difference between ECS on Fargate and EKS on Fargate? I had to know this to build better architectures for my clients. In 2021, containers got even better, and I was lucky enough to get a preview and present just how fast t

                                            Scaling containers on AWS in 2022
                                          • How to create Skills for Claude: steps and examples | Claude

                                            Skills are custom instructions that extend Claude's capabilities for specific tasks or domains. When you create a skill via a SKILL.md file, you're teaching Claude how to handle specific scenarios more effectively. The power of skills lies in their ability to encode institutional knowledge, standardize outputs, and handle complex multi-step workflows that would otherwise require repeated explanati

                                              How to create Skills for Claude: steps and examples | Claude
                                            • Introducing Amazon MemoryDB for Redis – A Redis-Compatible, Durable, In-Memory Database Service | Amazon Web Services

                                              AWS News Blog Introducing Amazon MemoryDB for Redis – A Redis-Compatible, Durable, In-Memory Database Service Interactive applications need to process requests and respond very quickly, and this requirement extends to all the components of their architecture. That is even more important when you adopt microservices and your architecture is composed of many small independent services that communica

                                                Introducing Amazon MemoryDB for Redis – A Redis-Compatible, Durable, In-Memory Database Service | Amazon Web Services
                                              • Moving off of TypeScript

                                                We Love You, TypeScriptFor nearly five years now, Motion has operated in a large TypeScript monorepo. At its peak, it was roughly ~2.5 million lines of code after excluding comments, node_modules, etc. To manage this, we used Vercel’s rather excellent Turborepo build system. This is not a blog post hating on TypeScript — quite the opposite! Motion would likely not even have survived until today wi

                                                  Moving off of TypeScript
                                                • Every System is a Log: Avoiding coordination in distributed applications

                                                  Every System is a Log: Avoiding coordination in distributed applications How Restate works, Part 1Posted January 22, 2025 by Stephan Ewen and Jack Kleeman and Giselle van Dongen ‐ 13 min read Building resilient distributed applications remains a tough challenge. It should be possible to focus almost entirely on the business logic and the complexity inherent to the domain. Instead, you need to revi

                                                    Every System is a Log: Avoiding coordination in distributed applications
                                                  • How does Google Authenticator work? (Part 1)

                                                    This post is the first in a three-part series. The remaining two: How does Google Authenticator work? (Part 2) How does Google Authenticator work? (Part 3) When you’re accessing services over the WEB – let’s pick GMail as an example – a couple of things have to happen upfront: The server you’re connecting to (GMail in our example) has to get to know who you are. Only after getting to know who you

                                                    • LogLog Games

                                                      The article is also available in Chinese. Disclaimer: This post is a very long collection of thoughts and problems I've had over the years, and also addresses some of the arguments I've been repeatedly told. This post expresses my opinion the has been formed over using Rust for gamedev for many thousands of hours over many years, and multiple finished games. This isn't meant to brag or indicate su

                                                      • Lessons from Writing a Compiler

                                                        The prototypical compilers textbook is: 600 pages on parsing theory. Three pages of type-checking a first-order type system like C. Zero pages on storing and checking the correctness of declarations (the “symbol table”). Zero pages on the compilation model, and efficiently implementing separate compilation. 450 pages on optimization and code generation. The standard academic literature is most use

                                                        • The Scary Thing About Automating Deploys - Engineering at Slack

                                                          Most of Slack runs on a monolithic service simply called “The Webapp”. It’s big – hundreds of developers create hundreds of changes every week. Deploying at this scale is a unique challenge. When people talk about continuous deployment, they’re often thinking about deploying to systems as soon as changes are ready. They talk about microservices and 2-pizza teams (~8 people). But what does continuo

                                                          • Prototyping in Rust | corrode Rust Consulting

                                                            Programming is an iterative process - as much as we would like to come up with the perfect solution from the start, it rarely works that way. Good programs often start as quick prototypes. The bad ones stay prototypes, but the best ones evolve into production code. Whether you’re writing games, CLI tools, or designing library APIs, prototyping helps tremendously in finding the best approach before

                                                              Prototyping in Rust | corrode Rust Consulting
                                                            • Replit — Comparing Code Editors: Ace, CodeMirror and Monaco

                                                              EngInfraAce, CodeMirror, and Monaco: A Comparison of the Code Editors You Use in the Browser I’ve been working on Replit for roughly six years now, and as the team has grown, I’ve focused on the IDE (what we call the workspace) portion of the product. Naturally, I was increasingly preoccupied with the code editor. While we’ve considered creating a code editor that meets our needs, the complexity i

                                                                Replit — Comparing Code Editors: Ace, CodeMirror and Monaco
                                                              • The New Internet: Tailscale's Vision for the Future of Connectivity

                                                                Avery Pennarun is the CEO and co-founder of Tailscale. A version of this post was originally presented at a company all-hands. We don’t talk a lot in public about the big vision for Tailscale, why we’re really here. Usually I prefer to focus on what exists right now, and what we’re going to do in the next few months. The future can be distracting. But increasingly, I’ve found companies are startin

                                                                  The New Internet: Tailscale's Vision for the Future of Connectivity
                                                                • 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
                                                                  • 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
                                                                    • Things we learned about LLMs in 2024

                                                                      31st December 2024 A lot has happened in the world of Large Language Models over the course of 2024. Here’s a review of things we figured out about the field in the past twelve months, plus my attempt at identifying key themes and pivotal moments. This is a sequel to my review of 2023. In this article: The GPT-4 barrier was comprehensively broken Some of those GPT-4 models run on my laptop LLM pri

                                                                        Things we learned about LLMs in 2024
                                                                      • openai/gpt-oss-120b · Hugging Face

                                                                        ","eos_token":"<|return|>","pad_token":"<|endoftext|>"},"chat_template_jinja":"{#-\n In addition to the normal inputs of `messages` and `tools`, this template also accepts the\n following kwargs:\n - \"builtin_tools\": A list, can contain \"browser\" and/or \"python\".\n - \"model_identity\": A string that optionally describes the model identity.\n - \"reasoning_effort\": A string that describes t

                                                                          openai/gpt-oss-120b · Hugging Face
                                                                        • 4 Pandas Anti-Patterns to Avoid and How to Fix Them

                                                                          pandas is a powerful data analysis library with a rich API that offers multiple ways to perform any given data manipulation task. Some of these approaches are better than others, and pandas users often learn suboptimal coding practices that become their default workflows. This post highlights four common pandas anti-patterns and outlines a complementary set of techniques that you should use instea

                                                                            4 Pandas Anti-Patterns to Avoid and How to Fix Them
                                                                          • Why DRY is the most over-rated programming principle

                                                                            I figured I'd kick off my new blog with the most click baity thing I could think of. I suspect any developer reading this is aware of the DRY principle because it is just so ubiquitous. If not though, you just need to know that it stands for "Don't Repeat Yourself" and is generally invoked when advising people to not copy and paste snippets of code all over the place and instead consolidate logic

                                                                              Why DRY is the most over-rated programming principle
                                                                            • Rust and WebAssembly without a Bundler | Tung's Word Box

                                                                              Posted on 2022-08-04, Updated 2022-08-06; Tags: javascript, programming, rust, webassembly, webdev If you're just getting into compiling your Rust code into WebAssembly and want to load it in a web browser, you might be taken aback by the multitude of ways of doing so. This seems to be due to the differing pace of web browsers implementing web platform features over the years. A lot of entry-level

                                                                              • The yaml document from hell

                                                                                written by Ruud van Asseldonk published 11 January 2023 For a data format, yaml is extremely complicated. It aims to be a human-friendly format, but in striving for that it introduces so much complexity, that I would argue it achieves the opposite result. Yaml is full of footguns and its friendliness is deceptive. In this post I want to demonstrate this through an example. This post is a rant, and

                                                                                • Notes by djb on using Fil-C (2025)

                                                                                  Notes by djb on using Fil-C (2025) I'm impressed with the level of compatibility of the new memory-safe C/C++ compiler Fil-C (filcc, fil++). Many libraries and applications that I've tried work under Fil-C without changes, and the exceptions haven't been hard to get working. I've started accumulating miscellaneous notes on this page regarding usage of Fil-C. My selfish objective here is to protect