PurefunctionPipelineDataflow
refterm
Our great sponsors
PurefunctionPipelineDataflow | refterm | |
---|---|---|
172 | 37 | |
439 | 1,496 | |
- | - | |
7.4 | 0.0 | |
7 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
C | ||
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
PurefunctionPipelineDataflow
-
Goodbye, Clean Code
Implement relational data model and programming based on hash-map (NoSQL)
-
How can I learn functional programming?
The Math-based Grand Unified Programming Theory: The Pure Function Pipeline Data Flow with Principle-based Warehouse/Workshop Model
-
Does Intel have an answer (or developing one) for AMDs Infinity Fabric?
I criticized "AMD Infinity Fabric Architecture" at the end of my article "Prediction: Intel will use "RISC-V plus x86 compatibility layer" or "RISC-V plus x86 heterogeneous computing architecture" to develop a new generation of "warehouse/workshop model" CPU".
- The Math-based Grand Unified Programming Theory: The Pure Function Pipeline Data Flow with principle-based Warehouse/Workshop Model
-
What should I do to defend my rights if the architecture of the Apple M1 chip is plagiarized from my theory and architecture?
What's more, you're being somewhat liberal with your "invention" dates here anyway. I'm sure you realize that anyone can review the commit history to see when content was added to the repo. As of Nov 2020, the day Apple announced a fully operational and tested, ready-to-ship silicon package the repo was a just series of bullet points listing out well-known concepts of functional programming sprinkled with some religious analogies and inspirational quotes. The farther you go back in the repo commit history, the less content is there.
- Apple M1 Ultra's architecture is a mistake, and Why Apple is not the creator of the M1 architecture? (with comment from chip designer who have worked at Apple for decades)
- M1 Ultra's architecture is a mistake, and Why Apple is not the creator of the M1 architecture? (with comment from chip designers who have worked at Apple for decades)
refterm
- Linux Terminal Emulators Have the Potential of Being Much Faster
-
What Happens Before the Main Function is Called ?
refterm, a terminal emulator proof of concept.
- Beside SDL, is there an easier way to just show a custom rectangle with text, cross-platform?
- Windows Terminal is now the default Windows 11 22H2 console
-
Why Modern Software Is Slow
> licensing it so that they couldn’t even look at it
https://github.com/cmuratori/refterm/blob/main/LICENSE
It’s just GPL 2.0, what are you talking about!?
Are Microsoft employees vampires that will burn up instantly if they merely glance at GPL code or something?
This is sour grapes nonsense from Microsoft. “We don’t like your tone so we won’t even dignify your argument by considering it.”
At one point an MS employee said they would love to fix their code as suggested by Casey but he refused to even look at the YouTube video!
“I would love to hear your arguments but I refuse to listen to the sound of your voice.” is next-level dismissive.
-
Making a unicode console in opengl; I wanted to run my plan by some more experienced opengl'ers before coding it
You might also find https://github.com/cmuratori/refterm interesting.
-
How can I create a rogue engine from scratch without curses?
Casey Muratori made a renderer/terminal a short while back. Might be a good reference of you intend to go that route. https://github.com/cmuratori/refterm
-
Microsoft insults dev then takes credit for their idea
You keep complaining that it's not a fully working terminal. Casey, on the other hand, writes here: [1]
> These features are not designed to be comprehensive, since this is only meant to be a reference renderer, not a complete terminal.
[1] https://github.com/cmuratori/refterm#feature-support
-
Burn My Windows
After that post they did implement a full reference implementation:
https://github.com/cmuratori/refterm/commits/main
And there is movement in getting changes into the terminal itself:
https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/10461
-
Wezterm
For a basic example of why you would want GPU acceleration, have a look at refterm: https://github.com/cmuratori/refterm
Even processes that you wouldn't think would be impacted by a terminal can be hurt relaly bad by your terminal's performance: your compiler's logs, etc. The GPU rendering part merely guarantees that your terminal sticks at 60FPS (or, whatever your refresh rate is) if the processing behind is efficient.
What are some alternatives?
concurrencpp - Modern concurrency for C++. Tasks, executors, timers and C++20 coroutines to rule them all
xterm.js - A terminal for the web
gophernotes - The Go kernel for Jupyter notebooks and nteract.
Windows Terminal - The new Windows Terminal and the original Windows console host, all in the same place!
verona - Research programming language for concurrent ownership
kitty - Cross-platform, fast, feature-rich, GPU based terminal
BetterDummy - Unlock your displays on your Mac! Smooth scaling, HiDPI unlock, XDR/HDR extra brightness upscale, DDC, brightness and dimming, dummy displays, PIP and lots more! [Moved to: https://github.com/waydabber/BetterDisplay]
termbench - Simple benchmark for terminal output
clojurust - A proof of concept version of Clojure in Rust.
hyperterm - A terminal built on web technologies
chromium - The official GitHub mirror of the Chromium source
alacritty - A cross-platform, OpenGL terminal emulator.