cloc
medley
Our great sponsors
cloc | medley | |
---|---|---|
28 | 11 | |
18,497 | 359 | |
- | 3.9% | |
8.7 | 9.2 | |
about 1 month ago | 3 days ago | |
Perl | Common Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT 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.
cloc
- cloc counts blank lines, comment lines, and physical lines of source code in many programming languages
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Underrated tools & practices
Cloc - https://github.com/AlDanial/cloc
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Show HN: Cloc as a Service
and get the results on the cli.
Let me know what you think. :)
0: https://github.com/AlDanial/cloc
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erdtree: A modern, multi-threaded, and ️🌈aesthetic️🌈 alternative to tree and du - v1.7.0 release ️
Awesome stuff, thank you! I‘d love some flags/options for cloc integration if it can be detected, maybe a summary of the top N languages for directories (67% Rust, 13% Html, 9% Bash) or something. Just a suggestion/idea. Gonna install it anyway, it‘s shiny!
- How can I see what % of my project is written in Kotlin vs Java?
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I created a Blazor server-side application that has processed its first $1k in sales volume
The solution I am using is currently comprised of 145 projects, 141k+ lines of C#, and 37k+ lines of Razor, courtesy of cloc:
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Can anyone give me an idea of the size ration between a high level language and assembly code?
Just out of curiosity, I downloaded the latest version of GNU coreutils and compared the line count between a few source files and the resulting disassembled object files (using cloc to exclude blank lines and comments). It looks like the ratio is very approximately 2 assembly instructions per line of C code. Obviously, that will depend a lot on what the code is doing and the coding style.
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Take More Screenshots
When I started making a game [0] last year, first thing I did was write a little Unity script that takes a screenshot of the opening scene, counts current lines of code using CLOC [1] (for fun, not as a true measure of anything), and occasionally renders it all out to an image file.
With that I'm able to create some pretty fun time lapses of progress. I've been doing this at an arbitrary milestone, whenever my Luau [2] LOC surpasses C++ by another factor. This post reminded me I'm overdue for another now that Luau > 3x C++ LOC.
I find it rewarding to look back at my progress. I'll share in case it's interesting for you too [3].
[0] https://store.steampowered.com/app/2168330/Helmscape/
[1] https://github.com/AlDanial/cloc
[2] https://luau-lang.org
[3] https://twitter.com/kineticpoet/status/1619508466212831232
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Is there any way to get an average of number of lines added/removed (basically how large a change is) in user commits
My manager just asked me about this a few days ago (sigh) cloc is good for this - you can pass it a hash or two hashes and it will give you counts accordingly. https://github.com/AlDanial/cloc
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350 Stars: A Categorization and Mega-Guide
Finally, since I'm limited on the character-length of this post, I'll post an individual comment for each year with a table of data. The "All Rank" column will rank the problem by difficulty (measured by leaderboard close time) across all years, with 1 being longest. The "Yr Rank" column will be similar, but ranked only within that year. The "P1 LOC" and "P2 LOC" columns show the numbers of lines of code in my solutions for each part as measured by cloc (each part is stand-alone so there will be some duplication, especially for Intcode). Other columns should be self-explanatory.
medley
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What do people mean when they talk abou a pure lisp machine down to the silicon?
Medley, open source emulator for Xerox Interlisp-D machines: https://github.com/Interlisp/medley
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Ask HN: What software stack to select for this boot to code computer?
Your concept looks nice, it reminds me a bit of the Lisperati: https://www.hackster.io/news/the-lisperati1000-is-a-cyberdec...
So, did you consider Lisp or maybe Smalltalk? Plan 9 or Inferno might also be options.
Plan 9 comes in different variants, the "classic" one (with a Raspberry Pi port by Richard Miller) or 9front, an Inferno porting tutorial can be found at https://github.com/yshurik/inferno-rpi
Lisp and Smalltalk can run with or without Linux underneath, e.g. on the Raspberry Pi.
Bare-metal Lisp is available with interim: http://interim-os.com
Finally, bare-metal Smalltalk is available in my crosstalk system: https://github.com/michaelengel/crosstalk
Of course, Lisp and Smalltalk can also run hosted under Linux, e.g. using Squeak (https://squeak.org), Pharo (https://pharo.org) or InterLisp (https://github.com/Interlisp/medley).
Or - a crazy idea - build an emacs-only machine. That would be fun! :)
- Interlisp Online
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MakerLisp Machine - any experiences?
Also available online at https://interlisp.org/. Or follow the instructions at: https://github.com/interlisp/medley/releases
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it was all CL all along
the language analysis of https://github.com/Interlisp/medley
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Interlisp.Org Project News 3/15/2022
Medley Documentation. We've been updating the online documentation at least for getting started -- instructions on Running in various contexts and Building and Using.
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Interesting or distinctive lisps?
Interlisp for some ideas on supporting rapid prototyping and a historical perspective.
- How practical could CLOS paired with a Smalltalk-like IDE be?
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Version Control for Structure Editing
Of historical interest was Interlisp-D as a system that did structure editing and version management. it was at the beginning of time so getting it to work again as a practical development environment is a lot of work.
https://github.com/Interlisp/medley/issues/533
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Where to find "INTERLISP: The Language and Its Usage" by S. Kaisler?
If you have more questions check out Discussions · Interlisp/medley (github.com)
What are some alternatives?
tokei - Count your code, quickly.
maiko - Medley Interlisp virtual machine
scc - Sloc, Cloc and Code: scc is a very fast accurate code counter with complexity calculations and COCOMO estimates written in pure Go
Co-dfns - High-performance, Reliable, and Parallel APL
sbcl - Mirror of Steel Bank Common Lisp (SBCL)'s official repository
BQN - An APL-like programming language. Self-hosted!
gui - Bitcoin Core GUI staging repository
urn - Yet another Lisp variant which compiles to Lua
kakoune-python-bridge - Send selections to python while keeping history of previous commands
termux-create-package - Python script to create Termux packages easily.
lisp-system-browser - Smalltalk-like system browser for Common Lisp.