dnsguide
mal
dnsguide | mal | |
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12 | 94 | |
3,746 | 9,808 | |
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0.0 | 0.0 | |
10 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Assembly | ||
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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dnsguide
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Learning network programming in Rust?
Check out Building a DNS server in Rust
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Anything C can do Rust can do Better
Building a DNS server in Rust - Emil Hernvall
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What I learned from making a DNS client in Rust
I made one too https://github.com/ccouzens/dns-packet
The differences:
I followed this guide rather than the RFCs https://github.com/EmilHernvall/dnsguide/blob/master/chapter...
Mine isn't as polished. The command line parsing and output is more thrown together.
I hardcoded the packet identifier (it's not production code, and I'm only looking up one at a time).
I didn't use any bit manipulation libraries. I can see they would help because DNS packets don't line up their information with the byte boundaries.
- EmilHernvall/dnsguide: A guide to writing a DNS Server from scratch in Rust
- Building a DNS server in Rust
- dnsguide: A guide to writing a DNS Server from scratch in Rust
- A guide to building a DNS server from scratch in Rust
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5 Systems Programming Project Ideas
I highly recommend the Building a DNS server in Rust guide by Emil Hernvall on GitHub. This guide will walk you through how to implement the DNS server and recursive resolve.
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In-depth software programming
Rust: Building a DNS server in Rust
mal
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Ask HN: Is Lisp Simple?
>Would be interesting to see how the interpreter works actually...
It's quite easy to see, there are interpeters for Lisp in like 20 lines or so.
Here's a good one:
https://norvig.com/lispy.html
(It has the full code in a link towards the bottom)
There's also this:
https://github.com/kanaka/mal
- GitHub - kanaka/mal: mal - Make a Lisp
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Build Your Own Lisp
Here is one implementation of a lisp (mal specifically) in matlab: https://github.com/kanaka/mal/blob/dcf8f4d7b9cf7b858850a04a0...
Only 260 lines of code, pretty concise :)
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Found inside my compiler I've been writing for about 2 years
have a look at the crafting interpreters book, plus make a lisp (lisp is a great first language to make a compiler/interpreter for, just google "lisp compiler/interpreter" and you'll find lots of resources)
- Ce proiecte for-fun ati facut in timpul facultatii ca sa invatati ceva nou si practic singuri?
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Crafting Interpreters or Writing an Interpreter in Go? Given context
If you're really okay with the limitations of a tree-walk interpreter, you might want to check out MAL, which will teach you how to write a tree-walk interpreter for a LISP. The code for MAL has been translated to most popular languages, so you can work through the creation of an interpreter in the language of your choice. JLox would give you a bit more detail and a more complex language, but I'm not convinced that it's all that important.
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What do I do now?
Write a small programming language (lisp (https://github.com/kanaka/mal) or brainfuck) in C++ to learn the syntax more. This will teach you a lot about programming languages in general.
- Ask HN: What projects did you build to get better as a programmer?
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Can you beat my dad at Scrabble?
So I started some hobbyist game dev using Unity and realised that the full process of making a game has dependencies on a mass of lower-level skills including lighting virtual environments. As a hobbyist photographer I could see some useful analogies from lighting studios and other scenes
So I pivoted, and eventually made money, not from selling a game, but from developing tutorials about digital lighting. I was also able to contribute to a project at work that was making a product based on commercial games engine, not by actually coding it, but by helping to better estimate the costs of the asset generation required.
Coding Unity object scripts in C# also got me back into programming, and I went on to successfully build a self-hosting lisp interpreter following the Make a Lisp guidelines [0].
[0] https://github.com/kanaka/mal/blob/master/process/guide.md
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Advice for a first-time designer of my own original programming language? Presently writing the interpreter!
Hijacking the top comment to add https://buildyourownlisp.com and https://github.com/kanaka/mal
What are some alternatives?
talent-plan - open source training courses about distributed database and distributed systems
paip-lisp - Lisp code for the textbook "Paradigms of Artificial Intelligence Programming"
learn-to-code-rust-baseball - Learn to Code with Rust and Baseball
Lua - Lua is a powerful, efficient, lightweight, embeddable scripting language. It supports procedural programming, object-oriented programming, functional programming, data-driven programming, and data description.
os-tutorial - How to create an OS from scratch
sectorlisp - Bootstrapping LISP in a Boot Sector
mini-redis - Incomplete Redis client and server implementation using Tokio - for learning purposes only
project-based-learning - Curated list of project-based tutorials
didact - A DIY guide to build your own React
hy - A dialect of Lisp that's embedded in Python
naivecoin - A cryptocurrency implementation in less than 1500 lines of code
wisp - A little Clojure-like LISP in JavaScript