kitten
resin
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kitten | resin | |
---|---|---|
13 | 2 | |
1,074 | 564 | |
- | - | |
1.2 | 0.0 | |
about 1 year ago | 5 months ago | |
Haskell | C# | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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kitten
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Retro: A Modern, Pragmatic Forth
While not quite a Forth, Kitten is a stack language:
- Atunci când cauți de muncă și nu te mai angajează nimeni
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Stack-based array-friendly static-typed proof of concept
Since you're making a statically-typed concatenative language, I'll point you to a joy reference, kitten, notes to motivate type checking stack languages, and a paper that formalizes type checking for stack languages. Since this looks like a relatively high-level stack language (given the presence of ADTs), you may find that you want to add quotes to your language, specifically opaque quotes since your language is typed. In that case, you'll realize that you'll need a better way to formulate polymorphism over stacks, and the paper on type checking will provide that to you.
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A Forth Apologia
Well, there is Kitten, although it hasn't seen an update in two years and was moving quite slowly before that too.
- main repo
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Why Concatenative Programming Matters
Author ended up doing a lot of work on Kitten https://github.com/evincarofautumn/kitten
- The Kitten Programming Language
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my cat is installing debian 10
Kitten lang
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I much prefer `data.action()` to `action(data). Is it an r/unpopularopinion?
You may like https://kittenlang.org/
resin
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Ask HN: May I sell the copyright to my code?
I've built a search engine. It has its own query language, data structures and binary file formats, it's MIT licensed and it has around 60 forks. Nobody uses it though, even though it has been around for some years but it was just until recently that I managed to solve the very last of the most crucial of bugs, so I don't find that surprising at all.
It works well now, though, for a Wikipedia sized text based corpus, even though it's still in beta and contains code that can still be optimized. However, before I want to go any further with the project, I'd like to see if I can sell it, the copyright to my code, that is. Because maybe I want to be in the business of creating smart code, then sell it, then move on to the next thing? And maybe some company would like to have a search engine in their software portfolio? Suppose we meet, have a drink, see what happens.
Do I have the rights to sell it, though?
I'm the author of 99.999% of the commits.
https://github.com/kreeben/resin
- Show HN: Hardware-accelerated vector-based search engine for image and text
What are some alternatives?
JDK - JDK main-line development https://openjdk.org/projects/jdk
lucene - Apache Lucene open-source search software
jvm-parser - A Haskell parser for JVM bytecode files
Apache Solr - Apache Lucene and Solr open-source search software
mlatu - A declarative concatenative programming language
Studybyte - Studybyte is a search engine designed to help students find educational content effortlessly.
haskell-exp-parser - Simple parser parser from Haskell to TemplateHaskell expressions
RarbgAdvancedSearch - Rarbg Advanced Search is an advanced search tool for the popular torrent site Rarbg
egison-quote - Quasi quotes for Egison expression
pisa - PISA: Performant Indexes and Search for Academia
retroforth - This is a read-only mirror of the Fossil repository, made available via Git for your convenience.
SmartImage - Reverse image search tool (SauceNao, IQDB, Ascii2D, trace.moe, and more)