Ammonite-Ops
calculator
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Ammonite-Ops | calculator | |
---|---|---|
10 | 50 | |
2,489 | 24,798 | |
0.3% | 3.2% | |
7.7 | 7.8 | |
13 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Scala | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Ammonite-Ops
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Scala 3 Reflection
Scripting API is quite limited, so the third option. - reuse the ammonite scripts https://github.com/com-lihaoyi/Ammonite or look how this is implemented (using internal compiler API),
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New to Scala
Your exposure to Functional Programming with Haskell and Clojure suggest you will certainly pick up Scala quickly. With ZIO and cats, you can write robust software quickly. Consider the excellent Coursera Scala course. Get "the Red Book" https://www.manning.com/books/functional-programming-in-scala, and most important, play. Experiment to see how things work. Get https://ammonite.io/
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Audacity Fork Without Any Sentry Telemetry or Crash Reporting
Here's an example of a smaller project that added telemetry without suffering a fork:
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Scripting with Java โ Improving Approachability
Or ammonite - I've ran Gatling performance test from a simple script based on this gist it fetches all the dependencies, compiles and runs the test, producing nice html report..
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25 years of OCaml
Scala with the Typelevel ecosystem. Stay on the jVM, but have a much more pleasant and robust experience, including a great REPL.
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The Scala ecosystem and circular dependencies?
If you are installing, and you are learning, I would also recommend ammonite as an easier REPL.
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IPython as a System Shell
I've been using amm on and off https://ammonite.io/#Ammonite-Shell
pretty nice if you know scala, still have to use regular shell(s) so I do not forget them
- Ammonite: Scala Scripting
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A Lisp REPL as my main shell
I've never tested Ammonite, only read the https://ammonite.io/#Ammonite-Shell, so I'm only guessing here.
From what I understand, Ammonite was designed as a "readline shell" as I wrote in the article. It perpetuates this approach that everything is a command.
The thesis of my article suggests we do the opposite: I'm suggesting to rethink shells by starting from the interface (here the SLY REPL) and then implement the shell features.
In particular, it seems that Ammonite does not support back-references and I'm not sure it has an interactive inspector.
While Ammonite seems to be a definite improvement over the _syntax_ of Bash, etc., I'm not sure it brings much novelty in terms of user interface. But again, I know very little about it so I may have missed some features :)
I wonder what people think about Ammonite (https://ammonite.io/)?
It's not Lisp but Scala so may not be the authors language of choice however it can be used as a Shell: https://ammonite.io/#Ammonite-Shell
I am personally using it and compared to a classical shell like Bash it's really nice for more structured data related tasks (exploring some API, checking some data, creating a bunch of PRs at once, ...).
It also makes use of Scala's adjustable syntax and functional concepts so you basically get shell piping but in a strongly typed fashion (e.g.
calculator
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Hereโs how Google Clock and Calculator will be redesigned for tablets
Yep, I hate it. I ended up downloading UnoCalc - it's based off the Windows calculator, which is open source
- calculator: Windows Calculator: A simple calculator that ships with Windows
- Windows Calculator: A simple yet powerful calculator that ships with Windows
- Projects for Old Versions of OS X
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How and why Relational Model works for databases
I could see how someone would get that impression If they've only worked at companies who only exist solely to light VC cash on fire.
It's an incorrect impression, obviously.
For >20 year old code, Calc.exe is just one example off the top of my head - https://github.com/Microsoft/calculator
The majority of the products I've personally worked on over my 15 year career in software development are still doing useful things and contain code written more than 20 years ago.
- How are the system Windows 11 applications made?
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Good C# Source Code
Windows Calculator (Its C# and C++ mixed)
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Rewrite KCalc app?
I would like to contribute but have no experience in this department. Check Microsoft Calculator. It have a lot of good features.
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Microsoft publishes UWP to Win32 migration details
Calculator and Terminal are pure UWP applications.
Fair point. See: https://github.com/microsoft/calculator/issues/893
What are some alternatives?
better-files - Simple, safe and intuitive Scala I/O
Scalaz - Principled Functional Programming in Scala
UWPDumper - DLL and Injector for dumping UWP applications at run-time to bypass encrypted file system protection.
libqalculate - Qalculate! library and CLI
Scala-Logging - Convenient and performant logging library for Scala wrapping SLF4J.
ScalaTest - A testing tool for Scala and Java developers
Scala Graph - Graph for Scala is intended to provide basic graph functionality seamlessly fitting into the Scala Collection Library. Like the well known members of scala.collection, Graph for Scala is an in-memory graph library aiming at editing and traversing graphs, finding cycles etc. in a user-friendly way.
lua-language-server - Lua Language Server coded by Lua
mariadbpp - C++ client library for MariaDB.
Resolvable
cats - Lightweight, modular, and extensible library for functional programming.
scribe - The fastest logging library in the world. Built from scratch in Scala and programmatically configurable.