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Austin Z. Henley Associate Teaching Professor Carnegie Mellon University Programming as play 10/19/2022 See the discussion of this post on Hacker News. Sometimes I enjoy programming as play. The only goal is that I make something fun and whimsical that serves no real purpose except maybe that I can share it with friends. Similarly, I've written about why I prefer making useless stuff, which caused
Austin Z. Henley Associate Teaching Professor Carnegie Mellon University Challenging algorithms and data structures every programmer should try 12/21/2022 See the discussion of this post on Reddit and Hacker News. Alright, so we are all spending our leisure time reading about algorithms, right? Well, back when I was a student, my algorithms courses regularly put me to sleep. This is unfortunate be
Python strings are immutable, but only sometimes 2/15/2021 Update 2/16/2021: See the discussion of this post on Hacker News. The standard wisdom is that Python strings are immutable. You can't change a string's value, only the reference to the string. Like so: x = "hello" x = "goodbye" # New string! Which implies that each time you make a change to a string variable, you are actually producing a b
Austin Z. Henley Associate Teaching Professor Carnegie Mellon University More challenging projects every programmer should try 12/20/2020 Update 12/29/2020: See the discussion of this post on Hacker News. Check out the sequel to this post: Challenging algorithms and data structures every programmer should try. One year ago, I posted Challenging projects every programmer should try. It included a t
Austin Z. Henley Associate Teaching Professor Carnegie Mellon University Implementing cosine in C from scratch 7/19/2020 Update 7/20: See the discussion of this post on Reddit. Update 3/22: See more discussion of this post on Hacker News and Reddit. Update 6/23: See even more discussion of this post on Hacker News. TL;DR: I explored how to implement cosine using a few different approaches. One of
Austin Z. Henley Associate Teaching Professor Carnegie Mellon University Let's make a Teeny Tiny compiler, part 1 5/5/2020 This is the first post in a three part series. Check out part 2 and part 3 when you are ready. It is a beautiful day outside, so let's make a compiler. You don't need any knowledge of how compilers work to follow along. We are going to use Python to implement our own programmi
Austin Z. Henley Associate Teaching Professor Carnegie Mellon University Challenging projects every programmer should try 12/11/2019 This post spurred a lot of discussion on Hacker News, Reddit, and again on Hacker News. I collected some of the suggested projects and put them in a list at the end of this post. Check out the sequel to this post: More challenging projects every programmer should try
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