iron | clangd | |
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20 | 53 | |
407 | 1,323 | |
- | 3.7% | |
8.2 | 1.8 | |
about 10 hours ago | 13 days ago | |
Scala | Shell | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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iron
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Make Invalid States Unrepresentable
Scala has quite good support for refined types across multiple libraries. A solution using the refined library might look something like
- Y-at-il icy gens que creere son propre project open source?
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Effect of Perceptual Load on Performance Within IDE in People with ADHD Symptoms
> The output you see is not generated by python.
Obviously, as running the code generates a very different output…
> It's generated by an external type checker.
I know.
But again, you didn't say that.
You said the above code "generates" this…
Maybe you've heard that by now somewhere: Words matter… ;-)
> The context is python. We're talking about python. I'm making a statement about python.
No, you made a statement about type checking. Here the full quote once again:
> The contents of a string can't be type checked and if all methods are defined this way on a class none of it can be checked.
Nothing in this statement is about Python.
All I did was just proving your words once again to be nonsense: You can statically dispatch (which involves static type checking!) just fine on strings. My (Scala) code is prove of this fact.
> There is literally nothing in my statement to indicate I'm making a general statement about type checking.
LOL. Do you actually know what you're writing? Once more:
> The contents of a string can't be type checked and if all methods are defined this way on a class none of it can be checked.
That's a general statement… It couldn't be even more general, actually.
> But I will say checking for the contents of a string is rare for a type checker to do. That is a general statement that is generally true.
Once again complete nonsense.
There are whole libraries doing more or less nothing else than handling singleton types.
Whole software layers utilize that! But I guess you never heard of static data validation…
https://github.com/Iltotore/iron
You have so little clue, but such a big mouth… That's so embarrassing.
A helpful tip: Stop spiting out maximally general claims (because these are almost always wrong!), and think about what you're actually writing.
What's in your fantasy, or what you "may have meant" is irrelevant!
> The guy made factually incorrect statements and so did you.
That's exactly what I'm talking about: You're a severe DK victim as it seems…
> It's just true that he's wrong.
No, actually you are wrong with almost every claim, like I've proven now several times. And this nonsense still didn't stop… Oh, boy!
> people shouldn't get worked up about someone else identifying a mistake.
Think about that once again. Especially in the context that it's you who is wrong here with almost everything you say.
And no, nobody is "pedantic". It only gets quite unrealistic that someone who doesn't even get banal prose straight would be able to write any code. Because the computer is actually very pedantic. And after production is on fire you can't just come to your boss and excuse yourself with "but I've meant this differently, just the stupid computer did again not understand what I've meant".
But to be honest this would actually explain:
> I've likely worked for more companies then you in the last 5 years or so due to my personality. I don't stay at one place for long.
I have some suspicions to why you don't stay anywhere for long… And yes, that would be indeed related to personality…
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Does the fthomas/refined library work differently in Scala 3?
You might want to check out Iron.
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Iron updates: turning opaque types into value objects
And there is a beginner-friendly ticket: Add alias for True constraint and IronType[A, True]
- Iron v2.1.0 is out!
- Design by contract - Preconditions and Postconditions - I'm really amazed with Scala.
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Restrict uses of annotation in Scala
Annotation is not the only way (and probably not the best IMHO) to do refined types. You might be interested in Iron in Scala 3 or Refined in Scala 2/3.
- Iron v2.0.0 Is Out
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Iron v2.0.0 is out 🎉
The second major version of Iron is out, featuring a complete rewrite on top of better foundations.
clangd
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Speeding up C++ build times
I'm still waiting for clangd support, e.g. [0] before trying modules.
- [0] https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/1293
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Configure clangd in eglot to not add headers?
I know one way to do this, but hoping there's something simpler or more general. clangd (C++ LSP server) is over-aggressive about adding "helpful" #includes during completion. The way to turn that off is to pass -header-insertion=never on its cmd line.
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A little help for a C++ newbie
Install the clangd language server using your system package manager, e.g. sudo apt-get install clangd
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Effect of Perceptual Load on Performance Within IDE in People with ADHD Symptoms
> As a side note, I despise things like imports and aliases. I'd prefer that when I do jump to a function, I can read it without having to check if anything is imported or not.
One idea might be to use an LSP (Language Server Protocol) interface. It could describe the fully qualified symbol for you when you, say, select the abbreviated symbol or press a keyboard shortcut. I've been working on a moderately large C program with Emacs and clangd[1] recently and have been amazed at how 'immersive' it feels, and that's from someone who's used to the comfort of a Lisp REPL!
[1]: https://clangd.llvm.org/
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#include Cleanup Available in Visual Studio 2022 17.7 Preview 3
FWIW, recent clangd also has this feature: "unused" as of 14, "missing" as of 16, works better in snapshots.
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How to set up C++ in sublime text?
You need to install CMake (and use it to build your project - which you should do in any case) and clangd.
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Guide for starting out C and C++ Programming in Visual Studio Code
First we would need the Clangd extension as well as the LSP itself You can download the extension from #here The extension provides its own Clangd LSP but in case of issues with that we would like to download and setup the clangd package from the official site for both Windows and Linux I daily drive Linux on my laptop, thus this guide works well for linux users, Windows users can use programs like Cygwin to replicate the process
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Does C/C++ OpenMP pragmas break clangd LSP for you?
Few days ago I found a bug while using clangd LSP with neovim, and submitted a bug report to clangd: https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/1640
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vscode alternative for C++ on M1 mac?
Come to the light side: VSCodium with clangd
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Looking for projects to contribute to
If you use the clangd LSP: https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues
What are some alternatives?
scala-3-migration-guide - The Scala 3 migration guide for everyone.
ccls - C/C++/ObjC language server supporting cross references, hierarchies, completion and semantic highlighting
Troy - Type-safe and Schema-safe Scala wrapper for Cassandra driver
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
iron-cats-example - An example project using Iron & Cats
eglot - A client for Language Server Protocol servers
refined - Refinement types for Scala
nvim-treesitter - Nvim Treesitter configurations and abstraction layer
scala-redis - A scala library for connecting to a redis server, or a cluster of redis nodes using consistent hashing on the client side.
coc-diagnostic - diagnostic-languageserver extension for coc.nvim
longevity - A Persistence Framework for Scala and NoSQL
Bear - Bear is a tool that generates a compilation database for clang tooling.