book
mobile-nixos
book | mobile-nixos | |
---|---|---|
18 | 12 | |
1,160 | 727 | |
0.4% | 4.3% | |
2.7 | 8.8 | |
3 months ago | 5 days ago | |
OCaml | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
book
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OCaml: a Rust developer's first impressions
Some of your questions might be answered in this book (free online version): https://dev.realworldocaml.org/
- Compiler Development: Rust or OCaml?
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Nix-Powered Development with OCaml
I don't think they're wrong
the Jane Street side are quite prolific with blog posts etc
as a newcomer to OCaml one of the first, and nicer-looking, intro resources you'll likely encounter is the Real World OCaml book https://dev.realworldocaml.org/ which unfortunately does everything using Base instead of the stdlib
Personally that didn't sit right to me and I prefer to use the stdlib by default (which seems fine and not in need of a wholesale replacement)
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Comparing Objective Caml and Standard ML
This is an oldie but a goodie.
OCaml has, unlike Standard ML, grown quite a lot since this page was made.
In particular, the section "Standard libraries", I'd recommend looking at:
https://dev.realworldocaml.org/
A couple of places where the comparison is outdated:
- OCaml using Base [1] allows for result-type oriented programming
- OCaml using Base uses less language magic and more module system
While there was and is truth to the distinction that SML is for scientists and OCaml is for engineers, this dichotomy is getting dated: OCaml is under active development, which means that scientists who want better tooling will choose OCaml. For example, 1ML [2] by Andreas Rossberg was built in OCaml.
[1]: https://opensource.janestreet.com/base/
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Resource recommendations for a beginner.
Real World OCaml (version 2 is finally out) is also pretty good.
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OCAML HELP!
Real World OCaml is also a good resource, geared more towards people who already have some programming experience and want a more industry/practical focused learning experience.
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Teach Yourself Programming in Ten Years
ocaml.org’s new website is packed with lots of great early intros.
most learners eventually gravitate towards Real World OCaml https://dev.realworldocaml.org/ for additional learning.
Unfortunately, the learning resources for different domains out there isn’t as highly curated or prolific as, say, rust. If you do web dev like me, it takes a bit more work to find the tools and put them together. But the language itself lends itself well to systems level programming.
Fortunately, the forum is a great help.
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Help getting started with Ocaml
In general, better read the second edition which is updated to use current Core versions. A print version was published recently.
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learning ocaml this semester.
I recommend https://dev.realworldocaml.org/ and https://cs3110.github.io/textbook/cover.html
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Functional Reactive Programming
Elm is not dead. It just prefers a slow release schedule but is still actively worked on in the background.
That said, you might want to check out OCaml for general purpose programming. Super fast compiler, great performance, can target both native and JS.
It is easier to use than Haskell due to defaulting to eager evaluation (like most languages) strategy instead of laziness and being generally more pragmatic, offering more escape hatches into the imperative world if need be. Plus great upward trajectory with lot's of cool stuff like an effects system and multi-core support coming.
Real World Ocaml is a decent resource: https://dev.realworldocaml.org/
mobile-nixos
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Support for Linux distributions added to customrombay.org
For now, only information about Ubuntu Touch support is available on our website. We plan to extend that to PostmarketOS and NixOS. But which devices does Ubuntu Touch support? For example those:
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Nix-on-droid: Nix-enabled environment for your Android device (termux-based)
Github has more recent activity: https://github.com/NixOS/mobile-nixos
- Nix-Powered Development with OCaml
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Towards a reproducible F-Droid
NixOS/mobile-nixos
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Just discovered this project. Interesting! Couple basic questions
Any nixos users here? Anyone have any luck running mobile nixos?
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Nixery – Docker images on the fly with Nix
samueldr has been doing a lot of work in that direction. See https://mobile.nixos.org/
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Today I learned that you can run nixos on a mobile phone
With the code from https://github.com/NixOS/mobile-nixos/pull/445, build the demo example with nix-build --argstr device pine64-pinephonepro -A outputs.temp-tow-boot-install-script examples/demo/; of course instead of example/demo you can have your own configuration, but I started with demo
- Wir schreiben für das c't-Magazin über Linux - fragt uns alles! [Beginn um 17 Uhr]
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Mobile NixOS for Phones and Tablets
https://github.com/NixOS/mobile-nixos/pull/361
Though you might want to ask around for your particular use case. While basic support (it boots) is right around the corner, it's probably not yet at a point where it'll be nice to use.
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How does pmOS make those .zip files that you can flash in TWRP?
As for what I did with those zip files? I made the equivalent for another Linux on Android devices distro. The implementation probably won't suit your tastes, but it's something else to look at to figure out what can be done.
What are some alternatives?
swift-async-algorithms - Async Algorithms for Swift
postmarketos-android-recovery-installer
awesome-ocaml - A curated collection of awesome OCaml tools, frameworks, libraries and articles.
Tow-Boot - An opinionated distribution of U-Boot. — https://matrix.to/#/#Tow-Boot:matrix.org?via=matrix.org
reason - Simple, fast & type safe code that leverages the JavaScript & OCaml ecosystems
debian - Installation and post-installation scripts for Debian.
learn-you-a-haskell - “Learn You a Haskell for Great Good!” by Miran Lipovača
windows - Windows client for NextDNS
ocaml-containers - A lightweight, modular standard library extension, string library, and interfaces to various libraries (unix, threads, etc.) BSD license.
archwiki - MediaWiki used on Arch Linux websites (read-only mirror)
onelinerizer - Shamelessly convert any Python 2 script into a terrible single line of code
node - Node.js JavaScript runtime ✨🐢🚀✨