Read-Eval-Print-λove Read-Eval-Print-λove is an N-monthly newsletter of original content and curation about the Lisp family of programming languages and little-languages in general.
Read-Eval-Print-λove Read-Eval-Print-λove is an N-monthly newsletter of original content and curation about the Lisp family of programming languages and little-languages in general.
At Bugsnag we accept JSON payloads of application crashes. These often contain broken data. For example, if your app has crashed with an invalid encoding error, the JSON will often contain the invalid string that crashed your server. This shouldn’t be a problem for us as we read the JSON payload with Node and Node replaces all the invalid bytes with the unicode replacement character (� U+FFFD). Bu
Products Docker DesktopContainerize your applicationsDocker HubDiscover and share container imagesDocker ScoutSimplify the software supply chainDocker Build Cloud Speed up your image buildsTestcontainers Desktop Local testing with real dependenciesTestcontainers Cloud Test without limits in the cloud See our product roadmapMORE resources for developers
BER MetaOCaml is a conservative extension of OCaml for ``writing programs that generate programs''. BER MetaOCaml adds to OCaml the type of code values (denoting ``program code'', or future-stage computations), and two basic constructs to build them: quoting and splicing. The generated code can be printed, stored in a file -- or compiled and linked-back to the running program, thus implementing ru
Welcome to the Rice PLT homepage of MetaOCaml A compiled, type-safe, multi-stage programming language. MetaOCaml is a multi-stage extension of the OCaml programming language, and provides three basic constructs called Brackets, Escape, and Run for building, combining, and executing future-stage computations, respectively. (Please read README-META file in distribution for MetaOCaml's syntax for
People say writing Lisp will change the way you think, and most often that is referring to the sorts of paradigms that Lisp programs typically follow. After having programmed some non-trivial Lisp, you will more easily see things like code-data duality, functional patterns, expression-oriented programming, and so forth. But I’d like to mention one thing that a lot of people don’t think of regardin
Well-Typed and the Industrial Haskell Group (IHG) are very pleased to announce that Hackage 2 is now available for public beta testing. The plan is to do the final switchover in late September, to coincide with ICFP.Read on for details of how to help with the public beta, an overview of the new features and what the IHG has been doing to help. Support from the Industrial Haskell Group The IHG is a
In 2012, I built a controller so that I can open and close my curtain from the command line! It worked ok for a while, but eventually I rebuilt it from scratch. The description of the first build is here, or read on for the description of Curtain Mk 2. So. My apartment has a 16' wide floor-to-ceiling window, and a correspondingly-huge curtain. I wanted to put the curtain under software control so
Let's discuss reverse engineering tools. With all the disassemblers and debuggers we have at our disposal, we can readily dissect an interesting part of an executable. What our tools are less good at, however, is locating these parts. We often try to find some trick to latch onto the interesting subroutines of the target. Common techniques include searching for strings or looking for interesting i
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く