Glimpse
coq
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Glimpse | coq | |
---|---|---|
20 | 87 | |
1,151 | 4,594 | |
- | 1.2% | |
7.5 | 10.0 | |
almost 3 years ago | 2 days ago | |
C | OCaml | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
Glimpse
- GIMP's 2022 Annual Report
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BREAKING NEWS!
glimpse fork have already died :`( https://github.com/glimpse-editor/Glimpse/wiki/Development-Priorities
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LibSQL is an open source, open contribution fork of SQLite
Remember the fork of GIMP because people were offended by the name?
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Gimp development release 2.99.12 includes initial CMYK support
> What if the name of the software was CripplePhoto
Argumentum ad absurdum.
> I mean, no professional uses Gimp for photo editing
Perhaps because the lack of CMYK, the limited architecture for plugin, or the outdated UI have more to do than the name?
If the name was the real bottleneck for adoption, you can be sure that you'd see someone creating a fork with different branding and being widely successful. Oh, wait. It has been tried already! [0]
- OBS and Streamlabs Commit to Long-Term Collaboration
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when your mum calls you by your full name
There is a bunch of folks who forked Gimp because they find the name offensive. Since they still have to refer to it they use euphemisms (such a "upstream") or call it "GNU Imp".
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I REALLY want to create TakaMori fanart and post it here.
Glimps is a good one. It has pressure sensitivity support for drawing tablets. If you want something closer to Illustrator, Inkscape is your best shot.
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Windows, A Consumer Product.
They're named by committee. No committee would have come up with "GIMP" (also forked as "Glimpse").
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Founder of Adobe and developer of PDFs dies at age 81
I've been enjoying the Glimpse fork a lot more these days.
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The amazing Grant Sanderson (3Blue1Brown) demonstrates seam carving in Julia.
(cc u/krapht) check out glimpse! it’s a fork of GIMP that’s a bit more modern. also an nx version coming soon which will be geared toward beginners
coq
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Change of Name: Coq –> The Rocq Prover
The page summarizing the considered new names and their pros/cons is interesting: https://github.com/coq/coq/wiki/Alternative-names
Naming is hard...
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The First Stable Release of a Rust-Rewrite Sudo Implementation
Are those more important than, say:
- Proven with Coq, a formal proof management system: https://coq.inria.fr/
See in the real world: https://aws.amazon.com/security/provable-security/
And check out Computer-Aided Verification (CAV).
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Why Mathematical Proof Is a Social Compact
To be ruthlessly, uselessly pedantic - after all, we're mathematicians - there's reasonable definitions of "academic" where logical unsoundness is still academic if it never interfered with the reasoning behind any proofs of interest ;)
But: so long as we're accepting that unsoundness in your checker or its underlying theory are intrinsically deal breakers, there's definitely a long history of this, perhaps more somewhat more relevant than the HM example, since no proof checkers of note, AFAIK, have incorporated mutation into their type theory.
For one thing, the implementation can very easily have bugs. Coq itself certainly has had soundness bugs occasionally [0]. I'm sure Agda, Lean, Idris, etc. have too, but I've followed them less closely.
But even the underlying mathematics have been tricky. Girard's Paradox broke Martin-Löf's type theory, which is why in these dependently typed proof assistants you have to deal with the bizarre "Tower of Universes"; and Girard's Paradox is an analogue of Russell's Paradox which broke more naive set theories. And then Russell himself and his system of universal mathematics was very famously struck down by Gödel.
But we've definitely gotten it right this time...
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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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If given a list of properties/definitions and relationship between them, could a machine come up with (mostly senseless, but) true implications?
Still, there are many useful tools based on these ideas, used by programmers and mathematicians alike. What you describe sounds rather like Datalog (e.g. Soufflé Datalog), where you supply some rules and an initial fact, and the system repeatedly expands out the set of facts until nothing new can be derived. (This has to be finite, if you want to get anywhere.) In Prolog (e.g. SWI Prolog) you also supply a set of rules and facts, but instead of a fact as your starting point, you give a query containing some unknown variables, and the system tries to find an assignment of the variables that proves the query. And finally there is a rich array of theorem provers and proof assistants such as Agda, Coq, Lean, and Twelf, which can all be used to help check your reasoning or explore new ideas.
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Functional Programming in Coq
What ever happened to the effort [1] to rename Coq in order to make it less offensive? There were a number of excellent proposals [2] that seemed to die on the vine.
[1] https://github.com/coq/coq/wiki/Alternative-names
[2] https://github.com/coq/coq/wiki/Alternative-names#c%E1%B5%A3...
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Mark Petruska has requested 250000 Algos for the development of a Coq-avm library for AVM version 8
Information about the Coq proof assistant: https://coq.inria.fr/ , https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coq
- How are people like Andrew Wiles and Grigori Perelman able to work on popular problems for years without others/the research community discovering the same breakthroughs? Is it just luck?
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Basic SAT model of x86 instructions using Z3, autogenerated from Intel docs
This type of thing can help you formally verify code.
So, if your proof is correct, and your description of the (language/CPU) is correct, you can prove the code does what you think it does.
Formal proof systems are still growing up, though, and they are still pretty hard to use. See Coq for an introduction: https://coq.inria.fr/
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What are the current hot topics in type theory and static analysis?
Most of the proof assistants out there: Lean, Coq, Dafny, Isabelle, F*, Idris 2, and Agda. And the main concepts are dependent types, Homotopy Type Theory AKA HoTT, and Category Theory. Warning: HoTT and Category Theory are really dense, you're going to really need to research them.
What are some alternatives?
PhotoGIMP - A Patch for GIMP 2.10+ for Photoshop Users
coc.nvim - Nodejs extension host for vim & neovim, load extensions like VSCode and host language servers.
photoshopCClinux - Photoshop CC v19 installer for Gnu/Linux
kok.nvim - Fast as FUCK nvim completion. SQLite, concurrent scheduler, hundreds of hours of optimization.
caire - Content aware image resize library
FStar - A Proof-oriented Programming Language
gimp-python-development - Some ideas and tools to develop Python 3.8 plugins for GIMP 2.99.4
Agda - Agda is a dependently typed programming language / interactive theorem prover.
winapps - Run Windows apps such as Microsoft Office/Adobe in Linux (Ubuntu/Fedora) and GNOME/KDE as if they were a part of the native OS, including Nautilus integration.
lean4 - Lean 4 programming language and theorem prover
photopea - Photopea is online image editor
tlaplus - TLC is a model checker for specifications written in TLA+. The TLA+Toolbox is an IDE for TLA+.