lox-haskell
chip8-book
lox-haskell | chip8-book | |
---|---|---|
2 | 5 | |
6 | 147 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 3.9 | |
over 3 years ago | 9 months ago | |
Haskell | Rust | |
MIT License | Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal |
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.
lox-haskell
-
Advanced programming exercises/apps recommendations to code
If you feel like comparing implementations, you might want to take a peek at my implementation: https://github.com/Martinsos/lox-haskell -> I haven't finished the book unfortunately but I did all the work till chapter 9.5 -> each commit is marked with the chapter it implements, so you can easily follow the development that way. If you do make significant progress, do consider opening an issue on my repo to share your work, I would also love to do some comparison in order to learn more!
-
Crafting Interpreters in Haskell - Scanning
Very cool! More than a year ago I started going through Crafting Interpreters and implementing it in Haskell as I go, here it is in case you find it interesting: https://github.com/Martinsos/lox-haskell .
chip8-book
-
Could you suggest an open or a public domain platform that is suitable for publishing a book on emulation?
Not to discourage you, but there's already a CHIP-8 book in progress: https://github.com/aquova/chip8-book
-
feboy (DMG GB emulator) now has full audio support! Special thanks to /u/KingWallmo for working on it the last couple months. Suggestions on what feature to add next?
WASM support would be so cool. There are lots of guides online which could help you out. I saw a guide for the chip8 and it didn't even look too difficult, you can check it out here https://github.com/aquova/chip8-book
-
[Rust] Getting into low level programming. How and why does this pattern matching work?
Recently I've decided to learn low level programming with Rust. I asked for some projects to practice and got recommened to make a Chip8 emulator. That sounded fun so I searched a bit and found this guide that walks you step by step.
-
Show HN: How to compile C/C++ for WASM, pure Clang, no libs, no framework
I made some emulators in Rust as a learning project during the start of the pandemic, and ran into the exact same issue when I wanted to make a wasm version to run in a browser. Eventually, I was able to figure out how to do it, although I do use the 'wasm-pack' Cargo package to assist with it (I think you can get away without it if you're really motivated, you just need to set up the targets and other elements yourself). Basically you define some Rust API to expose whatever you need from your project, then that and the project get compiled into one .wasm binary and some (surprisingly readable) JavaScript "glue" gets generated which allows for easy inclusion into a web page. It works well for code in the std, but I've had issues with 3rd party packages.
It's focused on emulation development, but I wrote a document that describes the process I followed: https://github.com/aquova/chip8-book/blob/master/src/wasm.md
-
Advanced programming exercises/apps recommendations to code
I followed [this](https://github.com/aquova/chip8-book) book which uses Rust.
What are some alternatives?
haskell-lox
three-layer - :three: :cake: Architecture of the Haskell web applications
wefx - Basic WASM graphics package to draw to an HTML Canvas using C. In the style of the gfx library
Essentials-of-Compilation - A book about compiling Racket and Python to x86-64 assembly
ray-tracing - It's taking me longer than one weekend
cib - clang running in browser (wasm)
linear - Low-dimensional linear algebra primitives for Haskell.
wasm-fizzbuzz - WebAssembly from Scratch: From FizzBuzz to DooM.
chip8
llvm-project - This is the canonical git mirror of the LLVM subversion repository. The repository does not accept github pull requests at this moment. Please submit your patches at http://reviews.llvm.org.