plt
docco
plt | docco | |
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5 | 4 | |
5,133 | 3,546 | |
- | - | |
6.3 | 0.0 | |
10 months ago | 5 months ago | |
CSS | HTML | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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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.
plt
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Ask HN: Learning Modern Compilers?
I recall reading a comment on here at some point in the last year where someone who worked on a team that wrote compilers lamented the difficulty in hiring qualified people because the practice of compiler construction differs so wildly from what is taught in school or even most compiler books. Apparently it scarcely resembles what is taught in university courses based on the Dragon book or similar, both in the higher level architecture and the lower level techniques
I know that one difference is that compilers have adopted a more service-oriented architecture, kind of like the Roslyn compiler. This allows them to not only compile your code, but inform your text editor and linter and similar tooling of syntax issues incrementally.
What are other differences? Is llvm still relevant outside of academia?
Are there any books, papers, or open source projects one could study to learn how compilers are built in this day and age?
Also: does the more abstract "programming language theory" popular in the more formal functional programming world (e.g. denotational semantics, lambda calculus, Floyd-Hoare logic, type theory, etc: this sort of stuff[1]) have any relevance to compiler writers and language/language tooling developers in industry?
[1] https://steshaw.org/plt/
- What are some evergreen articles on programming languages and computing in general?
- What Books Should Everyone Read?
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Programming related book suggestions please
Programming Language Theory books and resources
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CSS Deep
steshaw/plt - A path to Programming Language Theory enlightenment
docco
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Ask HN: Show Code with Notes Alongside
i have seen those in annotated javascript documentation. but it was the other way around. (comment on the left, and code on the right).
they all seem to use docco[0] with the option to display comment in "parallel". the author of docco used it in their library underscore[1].
[0]: https://github.com/jashkenas/docco
- Docco is a quick-and-dirty documentation generator
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Lisp.py
Side note - it's been a while since i've seen a Docco-style annotated-source-style documentation! http://ashkenas.com/docco/
Backbone.js was the first time i saw it, and I loved it! https://backbonejs.org/docs/backbone.html It demonstrated to me that the libraries I use are just normal code that other people write, and i myself can read it to understand a problem.
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CSS Deep
jashkenas/docco - Literate Programming can be Quick and Dirty.
What are some alternatives?
Compass - Compass is no longer actively maintained. Compass is a Stylesheet Authoring Environment that makes your website design simpler to implement and easier to maintain.
documentation.js - :book: documentation for modern JavaScript
odometer
ESDoc - ESDoc - Good Documentation for JavaScript
css-loaders - A collection of loading spinners animated with CSS
sphinx - The Sphinx documentation generator
awesome-conferences
jsduck - Simple JavaScript Duckumentation generator.
chardin.js - Simple overlay instructions for your apps.
dox - JavaScript documentation generator for node using markdown and jsdoc
pnotify - Beautiful JavaScript notifications with Web Notifications support.
JSDoc - An API documentation generator for JavaScript.