Halide
tldr
Halide | tldr | |
---|---|---|
43 | 262 | |
5,714 | 48,494 | |
0.5% | 1.0% | |
9.5 | 10.0 | |
3 days ago | 2 days ago | |
C++ | Markdown | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
Halide
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Show HN: Flash Attention in ~100 lines of CUDA
If CPU/GPU execution speed is the goal while simultaneously code golfing the source size, https://halide-lang.org/ might have come in handy.
- Halide v17.0.0
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From slow to SIMD: A Go optimization story
This is a task where Halide https://halide-lang.org/ could really shine! It disconnects logic from scheduling (unrolling, vectorizing, tiling, caching intermediates etc), so every step the author describes in the article is a tunable in halide. halide doesn't appear to have bindings for golang so calling C++ from go might be the only viable option.
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Implementing Mario's Stack Blur 15 times in C++ (with tests and benchmarks)
Probably would have been much easier to do 15 times in https://halide-lang.org/
The idea behind Halide is that scheduling memory access patterns is critical to performance. But, access patterns being interwoven into arithmetic algorithms makes them difficult to modify separately.
So, in Halide you specify the arithmetic and the schedule separately so you can rapidly iterate on either.
- Making Hard Things Easy
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Deepmind Alphadev: Faster sorting algorithms discovered using deep RL
It is not the sorting per-se which was improved here, but sorting (particularly short sequences) on modern CPUs with really the complexity being on the difficulty of predicting what will work quickly on these modern CPUs.
Doing an empirical algorithm search to find which algorithms fit well on modern CPUs/memory systems is pretty common, see e.g. FFTW, ATLAS, https://halide-lang.org/
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Two-tier programming language
Halide https://halide-lang.org/
- Best book on writing an optimizing compiler (inlining, types, abstract interpretation)?
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Blog Post: Can You Trust a Compiler to Optimize Your Code?
It doesn’t apply in this case, but in general if you really want the best vectorization I would suggest using https://halide-lang.org instead of trying to coerce your compiler.
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What would make you try a new language?
If we drop the "APL" requirement, wouldn't Halide fit your criteria for the third?
tldr
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Ask HN: Is there a GUI for bash shell?
Maybe this already helps: https://github.com/tldr-pages/tldr
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Try / Ripgrep in Y Minutes
A bit of an aside, but I really like "guides to things we otherwise take for granted". So few man pages are built around example use cases, but those are often what make the case for a tool!
A similar spirit to projects like https://github.com/tldr-pages/tldr/ , but this has a lot more useful detail.
The ripgrep author has a blog post on performance and benchmarking that is an interesting read in itself: https://blog.burntsushi.net/ripgrep/
- Serving my blog posts as Linux manual pages
- Tldr: Simplified and community-driven man pages
- Tell HN: My Favorite Tools
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Should you add screenshots to documentation?
Looks like bro pages is archived and they recommend https://github.com/tldr-pages/tldr or https://github.com/cheat/cheat
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Have i made my own linux distro? ^_^
a very excellent tool to grab is TLDR https://tldr.sh/
- fixedIt
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Day 2 - Basic navigation
And that's why tldr is such a powerful tool! You can easily install it with sudo apt install tldr or follow this demo.
- Tldr Pages
What are some alternatives?
taichi - Productive, portable, and performant GPU programming in Python.
cheat - cheat allows you to create and view interactive cheatsheets on the command-line. It was designed to help remind *nix system administrators of options for commands that they use frequently, but not frequently enough to remember.
futhark - :boom::computer::boom: A data-parallel functional programming language
tealdeer - A very fast implementation of tldr in Rust.
Image-Convolutaion-OpenCL
cheat.sh - the only cheat sheet you need
TensorOperations.jl - Julia package for tensor contractions and related operations
zsh-autosuggestions - Fish-like autosuggestions for zsh
triton - Development repository for the Triton language and compiler
navi - An interactive cheatsheet tool for the command-line
ponyc - Pony is an open-source, actor-model, capabilities-secure, high performance programming language
fish-shell - The user-friendly command line shell.