|
You are here |
akos.ma | ||
| | | | |
andreabergia.com
|
|
| | | | | This post is part of the Languages Opinion series. Languages opinion - part one - JVM Languages opinion - part two - Rust ??thispost Languages opinion - part three - Javascript and Typescript Welcome back to my mini-series about programming languages. In this post, we will talk about one of the most interesting programming languages that I have seen in a long while: Rust. | |
| | | | |
babashka.org
|
|
| | | | | A categorised directory of libraries and tools for Babashka | |
| | | | |
bloeys.com
|
|
| | | | | In 'Thought 2: Regex is Like Assembly' I wondered why we are still doing regex in this kind of hard to understand, symbolic way, when we have already invented high level programming languages. There is no reason regex can't be written as clearly as any other programming language we use today. I thought doing this would be an interesting project, and so I came up with Regexl, a high level language for writing regex, that can be used as a simple library. | |
| | | | |
www.n16f.net
|
|
| | | The SLIME Emacs package for Common Lisp supports cross-referencing: one can list all references pointing to a symbol, move through this list and jump to the source code of each reference. Removing automatic reference jumps While cross-referencing is very useful, the default configuration is frustrating: moving through the list in the Emacs buffer triggers the jump to the reference under the cursor. If you are interested in a reference in the middle of the list, you will have to move to it, opening multip... | ||