iron
nano-emacs
iron | nano-emacs | |
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20 | 55 | |
407 | 2,466 | |
- | - | |
8.2 | 3.0 | |
about 15 hours ago | 6 months ago | |
Scala | Emacs Lisp | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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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.
nano-emacs
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:syntax off (2016)
Both points resonate with me, but I'd push back againt the idea that colored syntax highlighting is neccessary for either. I'm thinking of the Pygments 'bw' theme[1], which denotes strings in italics, and nano-emacs[2], which also manages to do.. a lot with a little (at least aesthetically, ie. idk about code volume or corner cases).
1: https://pygments.org/styles/
2: https://github.com/rougier/nano-emacs
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Effect of Perceptual Load on Performance Within IDE in People with ADHD Symptoms
It's not adhd specific but https://arxiv.org/abs/2008.06030
After reading this I implemented a code theme based primarily around typographic variation like weight rather than color. It uses only two colors (black and deep purple) in two weights and one italic each. I have pretty severe adhd and it's hard to judge but after using it for a few months I think this is better for me. Previously I had been using solarized light for nearly a decade for probably similar reasons.
Nano emacs was created by the author of that paper and its default themes are based on it, if you want to try it without committing to hand-rolling a theme. Personally I found that one too "light" (typographically, not color) but I also have relatively poor vision and like a large and heavy font.
https://github.com/rougier/nano-emacs
- Not trying to start a rumble, but why emacs
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What is your favorite color scheme?
I love the nano themes from N. Rougier, maybe not what you are looking for... (I am not a coder), works best with the whole nano layout
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How to apply set dark theme in nano emacs?
there is issue on github related to this: https://github.com/rougier/nano-emacs/issues/138
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Kawase Blur has been added to SwayFX!
Emacs with https://github.com/rougier/nano-emacs
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How to find where the value of a parameter is set (font size)
Hi fellow r/emacs ers, I am struggling to reduce the size of the fonts my configuration. I have based it on nano-emacs, I am using the variable nano-font-size but the font size does not change.
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A less verbose OR more organized modeline
I've been using Nano (and before that Elegant) which substitutes a headline for the modeline. Unless you're in the mood to try something radical, I'm not sure that I'd recommend it. That said, what I've learned from the experience is that you don't need much in the modeline for it to be useful. I've done some customizations on Nano and am satisfied with:
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What is wrong with this face definition??? (error "Invalid face" bookmark-menu-heading)
I get an error message that I do not understand, when trying to apply nano-emacs from u/Nicolas-Rougier in my vanilla emacs
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Nano theme and feel for spacemacs
Has anyone managed to get this view for spacemacs? Link
What are some alternatives?
scala-3-migration-guide - The Scala 3 migration guide for everyone.
nerd-fonts - Iconic font aggregator, collection, & patcher. 3,600+ icons, 50+ patched fonts: Hack, Source Code Pro, more. Glyph collections: Font Awesome, Material Design Icons, Octicons, & more
Troy - Type-safe and Schema-safe Scala wrapper for Cassandra driver
emacs-doom-themes - A megapack of themes for GNU Emacs. [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/themes]
iron-cats-example - An example project using Iron & Cats
rose-pine-theme - All natural pine, faux fur and a bit of soho vibes for the classy minimalist
refined - Refinement types for Scala
svg-tag-mode - A minor mode for Emacs that replace keywords with nice SVG labels
scala-redis - A scala library for connecting to a redis server, or a cluster of redis nodes using consistent hashing on the client side.
mood-line - A minimal mode-line configuration for Emacs, inspired by doom-modeline. (GitLab mirror)
longevity - A Persistence Framework for Scala and NoSQL
doom-emacs - An Emacs framework for the stubborn martian hacker [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/doomemacs]