XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0 (Second Edition) W3C Recommendation 14 December 2010 (Link errors corrected 3 January 2011; Status updated October 2016) This version: http://www.w3.org/TR/2010/REC-xpath20-20101214/ Latest version: http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath20/ Previous versions: http://www.w3.org/TR/2009/PER-xpath20-20090421/, http://www.w3.org/TR/2007/REC-xpath20-20070123/ Editors: Anders Berglund
NOTICE: I'm looking for Cocoa developers who are willing to help out with this project. Please contact me if you think you can help. The 0.8 release has been delayed until further notice. I intend to release it before the end of this year, though ;) - Bart You no longer have to cancel your ssh request because you forgot to load your keys. Because SSHKeychain acts as a gateway between you and the a
Yesterday someone posted a link to a great monad transformers tutorial. It's incredible. I think I finally start to understand (or at least being able to use) it. As part of testing my fresh knowledge I've written a simple virtual machine for a Forth-like language. Code (as usual - Literate Haskell, so you can just put it into .lhs file and run it) below. Enjoy! > module Main where > > import Cont
In normal programming languages, there are many keywords for flow control, such as for, while etc. These flow control keywords encode a particular pattern of iteration, such as looping over a range (in the case of for) or continuing until some condition holds (while). Imperative programming languages continue to add more iteration keywords: both C#/Java have introduced some form of for-each; Pytho
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