lo
chapel
lo | chapel | |
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64 | 26 | |
15,420 | 1,741 | |
- | 1.0% | |
5.8 | 10.0 | |
9 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Go | Chapel | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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lo
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Go 1.22 Release Notes
On the other hand, I advise you NOT to use this kind of library and write simple, fast go code most of the time, with the occasional generics helper. Why the hell would I clutter my code with, for example: https://github.com/samber/lo?tab=readme-ov-file#fromentries-...
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Go is not an easy language (2021)
This wasn't feasable without generics, and now with generics they're already adding some convenience functions to the stdlib, like in the slices package.
For map, reduce etc it's not in the stdlib yet, but you can use https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/samber/lo
- I wrote a for loop so you don't have to. Parallel Map, Filter, Reduce library
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What is your recommendation for a package beyond std?
In particular, I'd like recommend samber/lo, this is a lodash generic tool for golang.
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What 3rd-party libraries do you use often/all the time?
What are some 3rd-party libraries for Go that you use often/all the time? Instead of "just implement everything yourself", I would really like to get some tips. For instance, a few days ago I discovered https://github.com/samber/lo , which looks very good if I want to have list comprehensions (Python) / LINQ methods (C#). https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/atotto/clipboard is also good for clipboard operations. What else do you suggest and for what task?
- Fourteen Years of Go
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Functional Programming Library for Golang by IBM
A simple alternative is the combination of:
- https://github.com/samber/lo
- https://github.com/samber/mo
The split is also nice as you can choose to just use the generic convenience functions from lo without the more FP related things from mo.
- Khan Academy's switch from a Python 2 monolith to a services-oriented backend written in Go.
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In what ways are channels are better than the traditional await?
Some packages offer utilities to gather results from goroutines, such as multierror.Group or parallel.Map in samber/lo.
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samber/lo utility package based on generics
I came across samber/log a package based on generics for providing utility methods.
chapel
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Introduction to GPU Programming in Chapel
Thanks, @subharmonicon!
While Chapel can run on many different systems, the main goal is making HPC programming much easier. Therefore, we are currently focusing on hardware that you can find in HPC systems (NVIDIA, AMD and Intel). Metal doesn't fall into that category, unfortunately. So far, the name came up infrequently in our discussions IIRC (especially targetting SPIRV), but we haven't heard from any [potential] user who may be interested in it. I would encourage you or anybody else interested in it to create an issue asking for the feature: https://github.com/chapel-lang/chapel/issues/new. Seeing public interest in that direction can change our prioritization.
One thing that I wanted to add that's not in the blogpost is the "cpu-as-device" mode. With that mode, you can use any machine, even one without a GPU, to write applications using Chapel's GPU features. That mode is for those who want to do initial development/debugging on their personal laptops before putting their application on an HPC system. In other words, while you can't use Metal directly, you can still write GPU-enabled applications in your Mac using Chapel, if the end goal is to run it on an HPC system. More details on cpu-as-device: https://chapel-lang.org/docs/main/technotes/gpu.html#cpu-as-...
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Mojo is now available on Mac
Agreed. Here is a serious contender[0] minus all the hype and the $100M in VC money. You would expect a minimum of interest given how Mojo is received by the community, but not really in practice.
[0]: https://chapel-lang.org/
- Chapel 1.32.0 Released
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Rust vs. Julia in Scientific Computing
Cray is pushing their own language as well, Chapel.
https://chapel-lang.org/
As for Julia on Cray,
"Julia — The Newest Petaflop Family Language We Have Started to Love"
https://www.avenga.com/magazine/julia-programming-language
> Julia is one of the few languages that are in the so-called PetaFlop family; the other languages are C, C++ and Fortrant. It achieved 1.54 petaflops with 1.3 million threads on the Cray XC40 supercomputer.
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What languages are we missing on devenv.sh?
https://chapel-lang.org if possible, Nix was also recently mentioned in Chapel Workshop https://chapel-lang.org/CHIUW2023.html https://github.com/twesterhout/nix-chapel
- Chapel: Programming Language for Parallel Computing
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Getting Past “Ampersand-Driven Development” in Rust
See Val for a possible step into that direction.
https://www.val-lang.dev/
Or how the Chapel language for HPC is going at it,
https://chapel-lang.org/
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Ask HN: How do I get the most benefit out of my programming language?
I suggest posting to a PLT focused resource, such as http://lambda-the-ultimate.org/
That said, a bit confused about the languages you reference in this context (Python, C#, JS) - didn't see any mention here or at your github repo of languages (some relatively ancient) in this space designed.
Sandia: Programming Languages for HPC [high performance computing] - is there life after MPI?
https://www.sandia.gov/app/uploads/sites/179/2022/04/SOS10-T...
Chapel:
https://chapel-lang.org/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Array_programming_lan...
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Twelve Days of Chapel: Advent of Code 2022
We needed the implicit conversion to `uint` in order for the overload resolution rules to make reasonable choices when faced with binary overloads for all of the numeric types. The document I linked talks through the examples. The case we were facing is something that we shared with `C#` -- in `C#` terms, if I make overloads for `f` for all numeric types (see https://github.com/chapel-lang/chapel/blob/main/test/types/coerce/allNumericsBinary.cs if you want to know exactly what I am talking about), then `f( myInt, myUlong )` runs `f(float, float)` which makes no sense. Especially if you care about numerical accuracy or program performance.
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-🎄- 2022 Day 8 Solutions -🎄-
Code | Blog Walkthrough
What are some alternatives?
underscore - 🌟 Useful functional programming helpers for Go
zls - A Zig language server supporting Zig developers with features like autocomplete and goto definition
mo - 🦄 Monads and popular FP abstractions, powered by Go 1.18+ Generics (Option, Result, Either...)
ATS-Postiats - ATS2: Unleashing the Potentials of Types and Templates
fpGo - Monad, Functional Programming features for Golang
zig - General-purpose programming language and toolchain for maintaining robust, optimal, and reusable software.
go-godash - An experimental generic functional utility library inspired by Lodash
hacktoberfest-swag-list - Multiple companies go above and beyond for Hacktoberfest, and this repo tries to list them all.
fp-go - fp-go is a collection of Functional Programming helpers powered by Golang 1.18+ generics.
gsoc-organizations - A site for viewing and analyzing the info of the organizations participating in Google Summer of Code.
go-generic-optional - Implementation of Optionals in Go using Generics
jmurmel - A standalone or embeddable JVM based interpreter/ compiler for Murmel, a single-namespace Lisp dialect inspired by Common Lisp