Assuming this would focus more on Rust, I did not expect the ending discussion on Lua. Finally, one of the key things that we found was that a lot of projects used C/C++ out of inertia. They don’t have peak memory or sub-millisecond-latency constraints and could easily be written in a managed language, often even in an interpreted one. We have Lua in the base system. I’d love to see a richer set o
There was a video a few years ago where Anders Hejlsberg (of C#, TypeScript, Turbo Pascal, and Delphi fame, among others) discussed modern compiler architecture and how it’s vastly different from what is taught in university compiler courses, or even in recent books on compilers and language implementation https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wSdV1M7n4gQ Specifically, he talks about the Roslyn compiler
Author here. Containers always seemed a little magical to me. So I dug into how they work and then built a “container runtime” that only uses the change root sys call (Which has been in UNIX since the 70s). This was not only fun, but took a way a bit of the magic, so I could better understand what’s going on when I use real containers. Let me know what you think! Edit: Fun fact: In my first draft
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