awesome-programming-languages
tlaplus
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awesome-programming-languages | tlaplus | |
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10 | 37 | |
512 | 2,188 | |
- | 1.4% | |
8.3 | 9.1 | |
10 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Java | ||
MIT License | MIT License |
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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.
awesome-programming-languages
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Good resources to find new and in development programming languages?
https://github.com/ChessMax/awesome-programming-languages seems pretty good. I would love to have some kind of sorting and filtering options, but it is definitely very comprehensive and actively maintained.
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Seeking Language Project to Join
There are hundreds of awesome programming languages out there. You are to choose what's more suitable for your goals and interests. Many languages are looking for contributors, testers and so on. Just give it a try.
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Let's collect relatively new research programming languages in this thread
Behold - the list of 303 languages - from old to new, from mainstream to super obscure. Last updated 4 days ago.
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Georgia Tech professor's thoughts on C/C++ alternatives
Another curated list of (mostly) opened sourced languages: https://github.com/ChessMax/awesome-programming-languages
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May 2022 monthly "What are you working on?" thread
Continue working on collecting awesome PLs. Want to say many thanks to all contributors. You are all cool. One of the contributors added 30 PLs to the list. It's incredible. Now the list contains 178 languages. And it's huge. The more will come later. Stay tuned! As always I'm open to any help/contributions (PRs or issue or even ideas).
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A list of new budding programming languages and their interesting features?
I'm working on collection list of programming languages. Here is the link https://github.com/ChessMax/awesome-programming-languages. That may be helpful.
tlaplus
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Quint: A specification language based on the temporal logic of actions (TLA)
```
https://github.com/tlaplus/tlaplus/blob/master/tlatools/org....
In any case, our whole team thinks TLA is great, and we're happy people like you and Ron find it so useful and insightful. We also think it is a very insightful.
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Concurrent Data-structure Design Walk-Through
There are no tests! There are various ways to test concurrent data structures. You could use a stress test, where you spawn a lot of threads and let them mutate the map in a random way and then check the consistency of the map and some invariants. You could learn TLA+ and write a formal model of the map and then verify it.
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In Which I Claim Rich Hickey Is Wrong
Dafny and Whiley are two examples with explicit verification support. Idris and other dependently typed languages should all be rich enough to express the required predicate but might not necessarily be able to accept a reasonable implementation as proof. Isabelle, Lean, Coq, and other theorem provers definitely can express the capability but aren't going to churn out much in the way of executable programs; they're more useful to guide an implementation in a more practical functional language but then the proof is separated from the implementation, and you could also use tools like TLA+.
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Programming Languages Going Above and Beyond
I wish something like Lamport's TLA+ (https://lamport.azurewebsites.net/tla/tla.html) was supported in modern language compilers - perhaps with annotations/macros and a mini formal DSL.
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A collection of lock-free data structures written in standard C++11
Checking the invariant with assert is also useful in my limited experience with concurrency.
- Ask HN: Is writing a math proof like programming without ever running your code?
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What I've Learned About Formal Methods in Half a Year
One advantage of formal methods is in determining "what was expected" (including all the goofy edge cases) without having to burrow into the details of code.
Take a look at Alloy (http://alloytools.org/) and TLA+ (https://lamport.azurewebsites.net/tla/tla.html) for example. (Or even the ancient Z ("Zed") notation (https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~15819/zedbook.pdf)).
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Can we make useful streaming APIs that disallow deadlocks?
I think that the traits in this library could be amenable to a proof of lock free behaviour at least for graphs composed entirely of Uniform flow nodes. but right now it's just a hunch. I a little while thinking about it over the last couple of weeks, but a proof, if forthcoming, will definitely be more complicated than I originally hoped. So to the second point of the post title/question does this really disallow deadlocks? I don't know. I think I'll definitely need some kind of proof assistant, and write now am thinking about TLA+, because of it's ability to reason about concurrent systems.
- Benefits to not unit testing every class?
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How has studying Mathematics changed/shaped your worldview?
Leslie Lamport's TLA+ is also good, but that's used more for reasoning about distributed systems https://lamport.azurewebsites.net/tla/tla.html
What are some alternatives?
dafny - Dafny is a verification-aware programming language
coq - Coq is a formal proof management system. It provides a formal language to write mathematical definitions, executable algorithms and theorems together with an environment for semi-interactive development of machine-checked proofs.
Vale - Compiler for the Vale programming language - http://vale.dev/
apalache - APALACHE: symbolic model checker for TLA+ and Quint
FStar - A Proof-oriented Programming Language
stateright - A model checker for implementing distributed systems.
Corinna - Corinna - Bring Modern OO to the Core of Perl
adventofcode - Advent of Code solutions of 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023 in Scala
daisy-nfsd - DaisyNFS is an NFS server verified using Dafny and Perennial.
advent-of-tla - AoC goals in TLA+
lobster - The Lobster Programming Language
Kind - A next-gen functional language [Moved to: https://github.com/Kindelia/Kind2]