learn-x-by-doing-y
fresh
learn-x-by-doing-y | fresh | |
---|---|---|
7 | 124 | |
1,092 | 11,857 | |
- | 0.8% | |
0.0 | 9.6 | |
3 months ago | 7 days ago | |
Python | TypeScript | |
MIT License | 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.
learn-x-by-doing-y
- Learn X by Doing Y
- Rising junior and no projects :/
- Ask HN: Where can one learn about boring web development?
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What're some learning resources and projects for python?
This list is enough, but after you get the basics from one of the above, do a project from https://aquadzn.github.io/learn-x-by-doing-y/
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Cognicull: Knowledge base for mathematics, natural science and engineering
Some other knowledge-graph type projects for comparison:
> Metacademy - "Package Manager for Knowledge" - https://metacademy.org/
> MathLingua - language for easily creating a collection of mathematical knowledge, including definitions, theorems, axioms, and conjectures, in a format designed to be easy and fun to read and write. - https://www.mathlingua.org/
> Learn X in Y minutes - https://learnxinyminutes.com/
> Learn X by doing Y - https://aquadzn.github.io/learn-x-by-doing-y/
Many people are also starting to use the bidirectional-link style of note-taking to create their own knowledge graphs. I'm curious to see what sort of tools will emerge in the future to help people share the graphs they've created.
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I was bored, so I built my own programming language
You see, I really needed something to do. I had been doing a few web related projects on the side and that was something I didn't want to do any more, at least for a while. So I looked into doing something "closer to the metal", something much lower level than sending requests back and forth to a web server. So I quickly fired up Learn X by doing Y and searched for something interesting, eventually ending up on Building your own Lisp (We all have a Lisp phase, it was just my turn).
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Learn X by Doing Y – A project-based learning search engine
Search is good, but if you're like me and would like to just see the list of available projects, it's here
https://github.com/aquadzn/learn-x-by-doing-y/blob/main/proj...
fresh
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What's Your Favorite Tech Stack and Why?
Deno: Deno with one of it's frameworks (like Fresh
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🧠 50 Articles to Level Up
The road to Fresh 2.0 (https://github.com/denoland/fresh/issues/2363) by Marvin Hagemeister Can't wait for seeing the end of the road! All in all great changes ahead.
- The Road to Fresh 2.0
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Fly.it Has GPUs Now
Because I have secret magical powers that you probably don't, it's basically free for me. Here's the breakdown though:
The application server uses Deno and Fresh (https://fresh.deno.dev) and requires a shared-1x CPU at 512 MB of ram. That's $3.19 per month as-is. It also uses 2GB of disk volume, which would cost $0.30 per month.
As far as post generation goes: when I first set it up it used GPT-3.5 Turbo to generate prose. That cost me rounding error per month (maybe like $0.05?). At some point I upgraded it to GPT-4 Turbo for free-because-I-got-OpenAI-credits-on-the-drama-day reasons. The prose level increase wasn't significant.
With the GPU it has now, a cold load of the model and prose generation run takes about 1.5 minutes. If I didn't have reasons to keep that machine pinned to a GPU (involving other ridiculous ventures), it would probably cost about 5 minutes per day (increased the time to make the math easier) of GPU time with a 40 GB volume (I now use Nous Hermes Mixtral at Q5_K_M precision, so about 32 GB of weights), so something like $6 per month for the volume and 2.5 hours of GPU time, or about $6.25 per month on an L40s.
In total it's probably something like $15.75 per month. That's a fair bit on paper, but I have certain arrangements that make it significantly less cheap for me. I could re-architect Arsène to not have to be online 24/7, but it's frankly not worth it when the big cost is the GPU time and weights volume. I don't know of a way to make that better without sacrificing model quality more than I have to.
For a shitpost though, I think it'd totally worth it to pay that much. It's kinda hilarious and I feel like it makes for a decent display of how bad things could get if we go full "AI replaces writers" like some people seem to want for some reason I can't even begin to understand.
I still think it's funny that I have to explicitly tell people to not take financial advice from it, because if I didn't then they will.
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Deno in 2023
Deno has also created a Next.js competitor, Fresh. I found it a few weeks ago and am starting to go through the docs, looks like a good overall concept. https://fresh.deno.dev/
- React is actively harmful if your website is static
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We need an official backend web framework
https://fresh.deno.dev/ - Fresh embraces the tried and true design of server side rendering and progressive enhancement on the client side.
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Hacktoberfest 2023 Recap
Along the way, I not only got the oppurtunity to revise old concepts that had blurred in my memory, but also learnt about new technologies like Fresh.js, a framework from Deno (a js runtime engine) that uses Preact, a React Routing library and used Chakra UI for the first time.
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Why Can't I Just Use This Function? The Struggles with Code Reusability in JS
A whole project might be released as a server or framework. Frameworks like fresh, and astro) both have had things deep within them that I've wanted to reuse, within fresh it's the esbuild configuration, and islands functionality, and within astro it's the rendering of astro files themselves.
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JavaScript First, Then TypeScript
The Fresh framework by Deno cited an improved developer experience due to tighter feedback loops.
What are some alternatives?
learnxinyminutes-docs - Code documentation written as code! How novel and totally my idea!
astro - The web framework for content-driven websites. ⭐️ Star to support our work!
clojure - The Clojure programming language
remix - Build Better Websites. Create modern, resilient user experiences with web fundamentals.
noteworthy - Markdown editor with bidirectional links and excellent math support, powered by ProseMirror. (In Development!)
qwik - Instant-loading web apps, without effort
GNU Emacs - Mirror of GNU Emacs
SvelteKit - web development, streamlined
neuron - Future-proof note-taking and publishing based on Zettelkasten (superseded by Emanote: https://github.com/srid/emanote)
Next.js - The React Framework
project-based-learning - Curated list of project-based tutorials
htmx - </> htmx - high power tools for HTML