awesome-ada
cppreference-doc
awesome-ada | cppreference-doc | |
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20 | 56 | |
577 | 405 | |
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7.6 | 0.0 | |
24 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
HTML | ||
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal | 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.
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awesome-ada
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yet another Ada web site?
At the moment we have * Reddit, a news aggregator, Awesome Ada link list, and they work good too. (Thank involved people for this!) * Organization/company based sites, and they work good (e.g. adaic.org, ada-auth.org, sigada.org, adacore.com) * Chats, comp.lang.ada "news group" * Wiki books * Ada Programming (Is it updated?) * Ada Style Guide (It looks like to be never updated since uploading) * person-driven sites are often biassed, become outdated and abandoned * For example, adapower.com, getadanow.com, learnadanow.com are not updated (e.g. no Alire mention), have expired SSL certificate and dead links. (Sorry David, it's just for example!). * long(?) list of dead or frozen sites * adahome.com - alive, not updated * adaworld.com - has changed owner * planet.ada.wtf not resolved * ancient Public Ada Library (PAL) gone * per country community is mostly alive * adaspain.org is't responding
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I remade the ada logo what do you think ?
I too are partial to the Ada (the person) logos. The modern takes in the awesome-ada site are my favorite. In particular the previous one was very cool: https://github.com/ohenley/awesome-ada/tree/f0e3df247119dd3730c4bda6cac0e0c3fd93087c
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Ada Library and Tutorial Requests
All libraries listed in awesome-ada added to Alire.
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Request for comments: an idea for a central repository of knowledge and resources for Ada
awesome-ada
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Lessons Learnt Moving a GTK Application from Go to Ada
In order to find good examples for Ada, I think we should add all our projects to the curated list of awesome Ada resources. OK, it won't be curated if we add everything, but in fact it's far from being crowded. It can be curated later if it overgrows. In my opinion, both these projects (Dashera and Yotroc) ought to be included, and they aren't.
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Hi I am a beginner and i am interested in Ada
Depends on the libs, see [Awesome Ada][https://github.com/ohenley/awesome-ada]
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Open discussion: Ada needs import (?)
If it's not in Alire, second step is looking in the curated list of Ada projects (and then follow README or BUILDING instructions): https://github.com/ohenley/awesome-ada
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Alire has reached 200 Crates!
There are still many interesting projects in https://github.com/ohenley/awesome-ada and other sources, which are not indexed by Alire, so there is room for improvement.
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The Ada ecosystem?
In terms of bootstrapping your environment and getting started, I'd recommend looking at Vim-Ada and Awesome Ada. I also tried to write up some practical advice from my experience, which might be helpful.
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Is Ada used only for embedded systems?
On Awesome Ada list, you can find examples of Ada usage outside embedded development.
cppreference-doc
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Looking for well written, modern C++ (17/20) example projects for microcontrollers
Rather than looking at good examples (which you should by all means do), add cppreference.com to you bookmarks and use it as your reference. By far the best C++ reference on the net. (from a C programmer who was thrown into C++ a decade ago -- slowly digesting C++20 now) Both StackOverflow.com and electronic.stackexchange.com are two additional QA sites that can help.
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My first C++ project! A "mostly sane" C++ coroutine helper library
Sadly, not much. My method of learning is to get my hands dirty and waste a lot of time doing things wrong before I do them right. The only resource (outside of Google and StackOverflow) that I always had open was https://en.cppreference.com
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C++ switch problem
In general, https://en.cppreference.com is your friend.
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Can sanitizers find the two bugs I wrote in C++?
> As a C++ language reference I highly recommend https://en.cppreference.com
I'd be careful about such re-formulations of the Standard. When I was adding printf format checking to the D compiler, I discovered there were subtle discrepancies in the description of exactly how printf behaves. I went back to using the Standard.
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Ask HN: What are great resources to catch up C++?
Modern C++ code now looks very different to even C++11 code which is considered to be the start of modern C++.
"A Tour of C++" which has already been recommended is probably a good start to get back in the game. I think there was a new version coming out, but not sure what the current status about this is.
[https://en.cppreference.com](cppreference.com) is a good resource for me. It has documentation regarding the new standards as well and up to C++20 the examples are mostly complete, at least for the relevant things.
I can also recommend watching the "Back to Basics" talks on the CppCon youtube channel and once you are more familiar also the regular talks. They are great resources about practical topics.
Jason Turner's C++ Weekly videos are also a great resource. They are usually 10-15 minutes long videos that give you a good start to think about. Great way to learn something new every week.
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Why did rust Settle on snake_case?
At Google, at least, the style guide says to use snake case for variable names in C++ (but camel case for classes). As far as I can tell, this is also the convention in the C++ standard library.
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wget keeps downloading forever, and stuff I don't want
Lets say that there's a file at https://en.cppreference.com/ called preferences.c. The command to download it would be wget https://en.cppreference.com/preferences.c
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I am stuck in tutorial hell
I would start with a direction of where to apply C++. Updating legacy code, working on embedded systems, creating financial application and creating high performant games are a few common option. Also sites like cppreference and Compiler Explorer/Godbolt are your friends in learning. CPlusPlus.com might help with legacy support as it stops with C++11.
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C++ #include errors detected
Keep in mind that most YouTube C++ tutorials are garbage. Use www.learncpp.com instead as a tutorial, and https://en.cppreference.com as a language reference. Once you familiarize yourself with the language, you can learn the best practices using the C++ Core Guidelines.
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I'm struggling
The important thing to remember is that a concept exist and roughly what it's called, so you can look it up when you need to. You don't need to keep all the details in your head, that's what we have en.cppreference.com for.
What are some alternatives?
alire-index - Community index for the Alire project
telescope-vimwiki.nvim - look through your vimwiki with your telescope
ghdl - VHDL 2008/93/87 simulator
browser-compat-data - This repository contains compatibility data for Web technologies as displayed on MDN
cling - The cling C++ interpreter
gnatstudio - GNAT Studio is a powerful and lightweight IDE for Ada and SPARK.
magic_get - std::tuple like methods for user defined types without any macro or boilerplate code
OpenGLAda - Thick Ada binding for OpenGL and GLFW
cgi-lib - A FREE ANSI C library for CGI programming.
ASFML - Ada binding to the SFML library
stdrev - Script for cppreference, to control the amount of visible content