r-source
reason
r-source | reason | |
---|---|---|
20 | 44 | |
1,090 | 10,056 | |
- | 0.1% | |
0.0 | 5.8 | |
7 days ago | 2 months ago | |
R | OCaml | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
r-source
-
Resources to consider after Advanced R
If you want to go deeper, reading the R Internals manual is a good place to start. And then you could even download the source from github.com/wch/r-source and poke around....
- I want to write the sample() function from scratch but it shows this weird 'internal' thing. can someone help me out
-
why
Fun fact, the R official contribution guide uses /* … */ for single line C comments as the standard (https://github.com/wch/r-source/wiki/Contributing)
-
Does CRAN still check packages on Solaris?
Looks like it was removed December 2021.. Typical CRAN beaviour to not inform package maintainers of this change ¯/_(ツ)_/¯
- Are there any plans of moving R development to GitHub?
- RStudio rebranding - What does that mean for R?
- How can I go from programming to actually understanding what the computer is doing?
-
Why do people discourage using for loops and what is the best alternative?
I wouldn't say that for loops are outdated, per se. As others have noted, vectorized functions in R are typically much faster than writing a standard for loop, but it's important to note that these functions are at their core for loops written in a compiled language like C. For example, the function lapply() used to apply a function to each element of a list in R is actually a wrapper for a function with a loop written in C. But don't take my word for it! Check out some of the underlying source code written in C for the apply() family of functions here.
-
Parser generators vs. handwritten parsers: surveying major language implementations in 2021
Hmmm? Found R's grammar in below a minute: https://github.com/wch/r-source/blob/trunk/src/main/gram.y
- Fortran Adds Conditional Expressions
reason
- Learning Elm by porting a medium-sized web front end from React (2019)
-
Melange for React devs book, alpha release
Hey HN, at Ahrefs we have been working on an online book that hopefully helps React developers get up and running with Melange, an OCaml to JavaScript compiler. You can read more about Melange here: https://melange.re/.
There are still a few chapters that we'd like to add before considering it "complete", but it might be already helpful for some folks out there, that's why we decided to publish it early.
The book uses Reason syntax to implement React components using ReasonReact components. You can read more about both in:
https://reasonml.github.io/
-
ReScript: Rust like features for JavaScript
ReScript is "Fast, Simple, Fully Typed JavaScript from the Future". What that means is that ReScript has a lightning fast compiler, an easy to learn JS like syntax, strong static types, with amazing features like pattern matching and variant types. Until 2020 it was called "BuckleScript" and is closely related to ReasonML.
- Ask HN: Interest in a Rust-Inspired Language Compiling to JavaScript?
-
Earning the privilege to work on unoriginal problems
This tracks with how I've seen "normal" languages converge on similar, flawed imitations of better type systems through tools and repurposed syntax. Thank you for confirming.
Do you have any recommendations or warnings regarding general languages which reach in the opposite direction? Reason[1] and F#[2] are both examples: they attach pre-existing ecosystems and compile-for-$PLATFORM tools to OCaml-like typing.
OCaml itself is also intriguing for personal projects. However, I'm worried the "GPL" in its standard library's LGPL license might scare people despite both the linking exception and Jane Street's MIT alternative.
1. https://reasonml.github.io/
-
Melange 1.0: Compile OCaml / ReasonML to JavaScript
ReasonML purely as a syntax layer on top of OCaml is still being updated and released[1]. Incidentally, I'm one of the maintainers of that project too :-)
With this Melange release, we're hoping to somewhat revive ReasonML and channel some folks back to the community from the perspective of a vertically integrated platform that has seen major investment in the past few years.
[1]: https://github.com/reasonml/reason
-
VN Compiler. Why using Fable is too difficult. (Pt. 1)
Why not use https://reasonml.github.io/ instead? Or just use Typescript?
-
My Thoughts on OCaml
Quieted down, but I depend on projects with worst graphs:
https://github.com/reasonml/reason/graphs/contributors
-
why
There is also reasonml for Web development.
- Por que Elm é uma linguagem tão deliciosa?
What are some alternatives?
NCoC - No Code of Conduct: A Code of Conduct for Adults in Open Source Software
purescript - A strongly-typed language that compiles to JavaScript
miniscript - source code of both C# and C++ implementations of the MiniScript scripting language
rescript-compiler - The compiler for ReScript.
kotlin - The Kotlin Programming Language.
melange - A mixture of tooling combined to produce JavaScript from OCaml & Reason
SciPy - SciPy library main repository
js_of_ocaml - Compiler from OCaml to Javascript.
neovim - Vim-fork focused on extensibility and usability
ocamlformat - Auto-formatter for OCaml code
refterm - Reference monospace terminal renderer
sqlite3-ocaml - OCaml bindings to the SQLite3 database