Ark
nsis
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Ark | nsis | |
---|---|---|
17 | 3 | |
548 | 596 | |
3.6% | - | |
8.4 | 6.1 | |
4 days ago | 2 days ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
Ark
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Dealing with documentation
This results in two websites: - the documentation of the language on the "main" website, https://arkscript-lang.dev ; - the technical documentation (+ modules) on doxygen: https://arkscript-lang.dev/impl/
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November 2022 monthly "What are you working on?" thread
1: https://github.com/ArkScript-lang/Ark 2: https://github.com/AFLplusplus/AFLplusplus
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Making your project available through Homebrew
# Documentation: https://docs.brew.sh/Formula-Cookbook # https://rubydoc.brew.sh/Formula # PLEASE REMOVE ALL GENERATED COMMENTS BEFORE SUBMITTING YOUR PULL REQUEST! class ArkscriptAT330 < Formula desc "" homepage "" license "" head "https://github.com/ArkScript-lang/Ark.git" depends_on "cmake" => :build def install # ENV.deparallelize # if your formula fails when building in parallel system "cmake", "-S", ".", "-B", "build", *std_cmake_args system "cmake", "--build", "build" system "cmake", "--install", "build" end test do # `test do` will create, run in and delete a temporary directory. # # This test will fail and we won't accept that! For Homebrew/homebrew-core # this will need to be a test that verifies the functionality of the # software. Run the test with `brew test [email protected]`. Options passed # to `brew install` such as `--HEAD` also need to be provided to `brew test`. # # The installed folder is not in the path, so use the entire path to any # executables being tested: `system "#{bin}/program", "do", "something"`. system "false" end end
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Understanding tail-call optimization
Lately, I've been working on optimizations for my language, ArkScript, and finally take some time to add tail-call optimization to my compiler.
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Solving the stack problem
A nice and bigger example would be this one, a snake game: https://github.com/ArkScript-lang/Ark/blob/dev/examples/games/snake/snake.ark
- Contributed to some OSSs with pull-requests in this year too.
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July 2021 monthly "What are you working on?" thread
Still working on ArkScript after releasing the 3.1.0, improving the standard library, adding modules, and working on performance improvements + adding parallel builtins soon!
- ArkScript 3.1.0 is here with macro and UTF-8 support
- ArkScript 3.1.0 is here with macros and UTF-8
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GitHub actions are awesome
Until recently, when we wanted to create new releases for ArkScript, we had to build the language on all the system we support (currently Windows and Linux), build the modules (http, console, random, etc), test everything on each operating system, and then package the needed files and directory in ZIPs. We had to go to GitHub, create a new release, add the correct tag (and not mix it with the title as they are different things!), grep the latest changelog, and add our artifacts.
nsis
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Ask HN: What's the best source code you've read?
Eye-opening but probably not "best": the Nullsoft Installer, circa 2002 (https://github.com/kichik/nsis). Its goal, besides being an installer, was to produce a small binary. So the source was remarkably pithy, which taught me a lot about being direct and to-the-point rather than aiming for beautiful abstractions or reusability.
Similar with Notch's Left4KDead, which implemented a fun zombie game for a Java small-code competition. A mirror of the original source is here (https://github.com/codingcampbell/Left-4k-Dead). I rewrote it in JavaScript as a Chrome App, in the process refactoring for readability (and sacrificing some of the code's beauty). https://github.com/sowbug/ChromeLeft4kDead
- How do you publish your internal LOB apps?
- Running Scripts in Github
What are some alternatives?
Peregrine - A blazing fast language for the blazing fast world(WIP)
AutoHotkey_L - AutoHotkey - macro-creation and automation-oriented scripting utility for Windows. [Moved to: https://github.com/AutoHotkey/AutoHotkey]
hera - Hera: Ewasm virtual machine conforming to the EVMC API
gmic - GREYC's Magic for Image Computing: A Full-Featured Open-Source Framework for Image Processing
fake-gcs-server - Google Cloud Storage emulator & testing library.
Feral - Feral programming language reference implementation
Ofelia - A real-time cross-platform creative coding tool for multimedia development
boring-lang - A very boring programming language
RenewCert - Renew click once certificates
zhetapi - A C++ ML and numerical analysis API, with an accompanying scripting language.
Squirrel - An installation and update framework for Windows desktop apps