ladybird
b-decoded
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ladybird | b-decoded | |
---|---|---|
9 | 7 | |
512 | 93 | |
- | - | |
8.0 | 10.0 | |
over 1 year ago | over 6 years ago | |
C++ | C | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | - |
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.
ladybird
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Dillo web browser homepage is for sale
You're in luck, Andreas has been hacking on that since a couple of months. They're calling the Linux version of the browser Ladybird: https://github.com/awesomekling/ladybird
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Which browser should I use? I am looking for privacy and less RAM eating.
LadyBird
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Note, the first time you ever run the render() method, it will download Chromium into your home directory (e.g. ~/.pyppeteer/). This only happens once.
Why not ladybird? https://github.com/awesomekling/ladybird
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Upgrading from Debian Jessie to Bullseye after nearly 30 years
The page loads fine in Ladybird[1] on Arch. It's the browser purpose-built for SerenityOS[2] using a in-house HTTP/JS/TLS engine that hasn't matured to the point of practical usability yet. If I were a site administrator using some kind of weird metric to block a browser, this thing would definitely go on the blacklist.
As for a more common uncommon browser, GNOME Web (WebKit) also works fine.
Whatever is causing you to get blocked, it's not the browser engine you're using. Check your plugins, antivirus, MITM engines, and whatever else messes with your connection. It could also be a simple IP block because of a bad IP neighbour or a shared CGNAT server.
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Ladybird: A truly new Web Browser comes to Linux
Ooh, ooh.
I'm on Ubuntu, and it looks like I need to upgrade to 22.04 before I can experience the build process for myself.
https://packages.ubuntu.com/search?suite=jammy§ion=all&a...
The repo itself is shockingly tiny: https://github.com/awesomekling/ladybird. Looks like it needs https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity as well. https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/tree/master/Userland/... is 100kLoC which is also surprisingly small.
- Ladybird Web Browser – SerenityOS LibWeb Engine with a Qt GUI
b-decoded
- found when searching for a way to make a color darker using js
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Minigames while waiting for builds
Just use b
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Note, the first time you ever run the render() method, it will download Chromium into your home directory (e.g. ~/.pyppeteer/). This only happens once.
I use b
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Notation as a Tool of Thought
I used to believe this but i don't anymore.
From https://github.com/tlack/b-decoded
Arthur is famous for his very dense programming style. Most C programmers would scream when seeing this code.
In his view (and others in the terse scene), it is much better to have everything in your application readable on the screen at once than to have great names for things or a lot of white space to comfort the first timer reader.
To them, once you've sufficiently studied that screen or two of code, you can understand all of it at the same time. If it's spread out over thousands of files, it's very difficult to understand all of it, which leads to bugs, unnecessary abstraction, and the need for advanced tooling just to work with your own project's code.
He wants to see the code "all at once" so he can understand all of its behavior without paging around and shifting his focus to another tab, window, etc. To get there he makes a lot of tradeoffs in terms of the code formatting and naming conventions. He also, in b, creates a dense set of interlocking macros and abstractions that can make the code very hard to follow.
Critics and the uninitiated say that his code is like old school modem line noise: random punctuation intermixed with bits of understandable code. I would suggest that he's actually quite careful with the abstractions he chooses and they are actually not always the most dense, highly compressed code structures available to him. He chooses wisely and his code rewards deep study.
Interview with Arthur Whitney: https://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=1531242
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Thinking in an Array Language
Here's some links relating to this style of code that you may find useful:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1W83ME5JecI2hd5hAUqQ1BVF3...
https://github.com/tlack/b-decoded
https://chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/90748/conversation/ngn-...
They're not 1.5 paragraphs per line, but enough to give a taste of the implementation style.
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20 times a day. 20 x 4 sec = 80 sec = 1min + 20sec. For vim users, this is a lot.
I could write a whole compiler in that time.
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Someone earlier linked to Arthur Whitney's style of coding in the comments. Can we discuss this further? I am disturbed by what I saw.
Here is a link: https://github.com/tlack/b-decoded
What are some alternatives?
netsurf - netsurf
jsource - J engine source mirror
ngn-k-tutorial - An ngn/k tutorial.
pyppeteer - Headless chrome/chromium automation library (unofficial port of puppeteer)
waybackpack - Download the entire Wayback Machine archive for a given URL.
krakatoa
docker-http-https-echo - Docker image that echoes request data as JSON; listens on HTTP/S, useful for debugging.
mhwaveedit - Sound file editor (written in C using the GTK+ toolkit)
core - Midori Web Browser - a lightweight, fast and free web browser using WebKit and GTK+
serenity - The Serenity Operating System 🐞
KyuWeb - A proposal for a simple document-oriented web.