Crafting Interpreters
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0.0 | 8.2 | |
29 days ago | 4 days ago | |
HTML | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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Crafting Interpreters
- Crafting Interpreters
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The Top 10 GitHub Repositories Making Waves 🌊📊
Build an Interpreter (Chapter 14 on is written in C)
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Writing a Debugger from Scratch: Breakpoints
I’m guessing you’ll have to work with the scopes in the resolver:
https://github.com/munificent/craftinginterpreters/blob/mast...
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loxcraft: a compiler, language server, and online playground for the Lox programming language
Better open an issue/request wiki edit at https://github.com/munificent/craftinginterpreters/wiki/Lox-implementations
- Gigachad Ken Thomson.
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Show HN: Yaksha Programming Language
I'm late to the party, but I want to say thank you for sharing this. It's inspiring to look at how much you've built and (hopefully) enjoyed the process of building! I'm loving everything -- your site, your language design, your docs, your builtin libraries, your dev tools. Beyond impressive. People like you are the ones who make HN one of my best places on the internet.
For context on where I'm coming from, about two weeks ago I picked up Crafting Interpreters [1] for fun. I'm finding your clear-yet-concise Compiler internals [2] to be particularly compelling reading, and jumping back and forth between those "how this all works" docs and the live example of this language you actually built do a WASM-compiled tree-blowing-in-the-wind animation is just... just wow. So freaking cool!
I also enjoyed reading the comment thread that inspired you to start on Yaksha and seeing how this project has a wholesome start as inspiration-by-programming-hero. I hope you recognize that a few years later you've now ascended from inspiree to inspirer. I also hope you're still having tons of fun building out Yaksha!
[1] https://www.craftinginterpreters.com/
[2] https://yakshalang.github.io/documentation.html#compiler-int...
- Keeping track of returned and break-ed values between code blocks
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How do you start your own programming language?
There are books which will talk you through the process. Crafting Interpreters is highly spoken of; I used Writing an Interpreter in Go, because I like Go. Then there's Compilers: Principles, Techniques, and Tools (the "Dragon Book"). This is considered heavy, but a classic, it's been around since '86.
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Designing a new language
I cannot recommend Crafting Interpreters by Robert Nystrom enough, it covers a lot of the stuff you need to know, completely for free.
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A roadmap to design programming languages
Crafting Interpreters is a fun primer on language design. It has a complete roadmap to build a fairly simple language, twice. There are some topics it won't touch on, like static type systems, but it provides a great introduction so that you can start tinkering and learn by doing.
Previous Serverless Version 0.5.x
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The Top 10 GitHub Repositories Making Waves 🌊📊
Github | Website
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Invocation error - can't find any results helping me to solve this issue
i deployed a lambda and http api gateway using a serverless.com (sls) template as a start. I get the following error when it processes a specific request:
- Consulta: buenas practicas AWS
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Deploying Lambdas from Zipped Code on S3 vs Image Repository
Have you tried serverless.com ? It lets you have infrastructure as code.
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[p] I built an open source platform to deploy computationally intensive Python functions as serverless jobs, with no timeouts
- With Lambda, you manage creating and building the container yourself, as well as updating the Lambda function code. There are tools out there such as sst or serverless.com which help streamline this.
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AWS Lambda, a good host for a rest API?
If you'd like to use Lambda, usually you need to engineer FOR it, from day one, you don't (often) get to choose some other framework and shoehorn it into Lambda and Serverless. There's some great frameworks to help deploy code into Lambda easily and create REST endpoints for things, one such frameworks is serverless.com that helps easily deploy to it, but it lacks a framework for doing REST that also supports local emulation (as easily). For that, I recommend a framework by AWS called Chalice. This is an amazing REST framework that runs a proxy that works locally and deploys exactly the same on Lambda, it is Python however.
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How are you deploying cloud functions (GCF/Lambda/Firebase/whatever) from your monorepos?
I use serverless.com for AWS stuff.
- First time building microservice-based application
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Key learnings after 10h diving into Lambda, js and Github Actions
After knocking out a README with a set of goals and a list of TODOs to check off as I made progress, I spent about 10 hours over a weekend trying to get something to work. I used serverless for making Lambda easier, Github Actions for the deploy pipeline and store my credentials; and sadly I rolled my own access_token refresh logic because I couldn't find a helper that just did that for me! wtf!?
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Does anyone use serverless framework with Workers?
Does everyone who uses Workers just use wrangler cli and the cloudflare console UI for everything or is anyone using other tools like serverless framework (https://serverless.com) instead? Looks like they added some support for cloudflare but haven't tried it yet.
What are some alternatives?
git-internals-pdf - PDF on Git Internals
Zappa - Serverless Python
You-Dont-Know-JS - A book series on JavaScript. @YDKJS on twitter.
apex
tinyrenderer - A brief computer graphics / rendering course
python-lambda - A toolkit for developing and deploying serverless Python code in AWS Lambda.
paip-lisp - Lisp code for the textbook "Paradigms of Artificial Intelligence Programming"
drover - Drover is a command-line utility for deploying Python packages to Lambda functions.
CppCoreGuidelines - The C++ Core Guidelines are a set of tried-and-true guidelines, rules, and best practices about coding in C++
formidable - The most used, flexible, fast and streaming parser for multipart form data. Supports uploading to serverless environments, AWS S3, Azure, GCP or the filesystem. Used in production.
30-days-of-elixir - A walk through the Elixir language in 30 exercises.
atlantis - Terraform Pull Request Automation