CBofN
uiua
CBofN | uiua | |
---|---|---|
8 | 9 | |
87 | 1,384 | |
- | 4.7% | |
10.0 | 10.0 | |
over 3 years ago | 4 days ago | |
C | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
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CBofN
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CS251: Great Ideas in Theoretical Computer Science (CMU)
Source code for the second book:
https://github.com/gwf/CBofN
Use DieHard to avoid crashing newer window managers such as CWM:
https://github.com/emeryberger/DieHard
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KamilaLisp – A functional, flexible and concise Lisp
Check out stutter from the Computational Beauty of Nature too:
https://github.com/gwf/CBofN
cat data/demo.lisp | ./bin/stutter
Have a look on the file on how integers and aritmetics are implemented.
The books explains that, but is not free. But you can get it somewhere else.
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Old Math Software from 1990s
From the The Computational Beauty of Nature:
https://github.com/gwf/CBofN
If you use CWM as your window manager, it might crash as some of the software only works fine
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The Mathematical Hacker
Read The Computational Beauty of Nature and compile the associated examples:
https://github.com/gwf/CBofN
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“A damn stupid thing to do”–the origins of C
On C, compilers in the 90's sucked up a bit, and the code wasn't much better.
Consider this:
https://github.com/gwf/CBofN
This code crashed CWM under OpenBSD 7.2, but it worked under FVWM.
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New research suggests our brains use quantum computation
https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262561273/the-computational-bea... and
https://github.com/gwf/CBofN
On Debian/Ubuntu: install xorg-dev build-essentil git and clone it.
*BSD users: You and we already know what to do.
- Physicist Erwin Schrödinger on Free Will and Pantheism
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Summer Book Recommendations?
This is a really unique book, but it is quite dated as the graphics/simulations are written in C (https://github.com/gwf/CBofN). But I don't think the book text has any code in it nor does is it necessary to read the code to read the book. Rather it is mostly conceptual with some mathematics.
uiua
- Borrow Checking, RC, GC, and the Eleven () Other Memory Safety Approaches
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Array Languages vs. the Curse of the Spreadsheet
This is what I love in Uiua[1]. That operators can be written as english words instead of unicode symbols. Makes it quite similar looking to functuinal point free code.
[1]: https://www.uiua.org/
- KamilaLisp – A functional, flexible and concise Lisp
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k on pdp11
you may also enjoy uiua (https://www.uiua.org/) which uses these alien glyphs but is even more alien because it's a concatenative language (stack oriented), like forth or postscript, but to make it even more alien it's written right to left. For example 1+2 is written "+ 1 2" (in forth it would be "1 2 +")
The language and the site are brilliant and I think worth 30m of your time skimming through and trying out the examples in the online editor / tutorial.
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-❄️- 2023 Day 11 Solutions -❄️-
From https://www.uiua.org/
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Attempting each AOC in a language starting with each letter of the alphabet
If you're fine with tacit array-oriented (ie APL-like): Uiua.
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Vector database is not a separate database category
As a lover of array languages, I remember being excited to read a futurist article on vector processors and programming languages. It was written right before Wes McKinney worked on Pandas (the J programming language influenced him), and I thought J/APL or another array language was going to explode. J has Jd, in which J is fully integrated. This did not come to pass (yet). No matter, I still enjoy array languages anyway. There's a new array language, uiua[1], that is a mix of array and stack concepts with a good standard library including audio and graphics.
[1] https://www.uiua.org/
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Uiua: A minimal stack-based, array-based language
Yeah
> The main language that inspired Uiua is BQN. While I had heard about APL before, BQN was my first real exposure to the power of the array paradigm. I think the language is an astounding feat of engineering. Marshall is both a genius and a great communicator.
https://www.uiua.org/docs/design
Also, a week ago there were only two contributors to the project: 1000+ by kaikalii, and this single commit by Marshall:
https://github.com/uiua-lang/uiua/pull/1/files
What are some alternatives?
if-then-else - !!Con West 2019 talk
bqnpad - Online REPL for BQN
adjoint - Thoughts on adjoint, norm and such.
BQN - An APL-like programming language. Self-hosted!
lean-liquid - 💧 Liquid Tensor Experiment
related_post_gen - Data Processing benchmark featuring Rust, Go, Swift, Zig, Julia etc.
edina - Edina - A simple stack-oriented compiled programming language.
cognate - A human readable quasi-concatenative programming language
kotlingrad - 🧩 Shape-Safe Symbolic Differentiation with Algebraic Data Types
ivy - ivy, an APL-like calculator
sqlite-vss - A SQLite extension for efficient vector search, based on Faiss!
ann-benchmarks - Benchmarks of approximate nearest neighbor libraries in Python