rhino
Git
rhino | Git | |
---|---|---|
14 | 287 | |
3,979 | 50,099 | |
0.9% | 1.6% | |
8.1 | 10.0 | |
5 days ago | 3 days ago | |
JavaScript | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
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.
rhino
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An ES5-compliant JavaScript interpreter, written in Java
I would guess that depends on the licensing context in which it will be running, since Rhino is MPLv2 <https://github.com/mozilla/rhino/blob/Rhino1_7_14_Release/LI...> and OP's repo is MIT whereas Graal is UPLv1 <https://github.com/oracle/graaljs/blob/graal-23.1.2/LICENSE>. GitHub's license gizmo claims it is OSI/FSF approved, but Oracle gonna Oracle and they for sure have more lawyers than you do
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A list of JavaScript engines, runtimes, interpreters
Rhino
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I found a remote code execution bug in VSCode that can be triggered from untrusted workspaces. Microsoft fixed it but marked it as moderate severity and ineligible under their bug bounty program.
Mozilla made Rhino
- ¿Es C++ inútil?
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The check of the Rhino JavaScript engine or how the unicorn met the rhino
At the same time as studying the Rhino's source code, I downloaded its source files and ran the analysis using the PVS-Studio plugin for IntelliJ IDEA. The analyzer found quite a few warnings for a 25-year-old project (they are listed in descending order of certainty):
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I’ve spent the last few months working on a project that recreates castles in 3D. This is Kenilworth Castle as it may had been in the 1600s.
I'm guessing not this...
- Call JavaScript From Java
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Best way to integrate Python and JavaScript?
I'm guessing it would be possible using Jython and Rhino, for one example, but I'm curious whether or not anyone's ever actually done this, and if there are solutions for other platforms (especially CPython).
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25 Years of Friendship
This is Tuvix
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I shit you not, removing this line of code breaks my project.
Rhino has entered the chat...
Git
- Git tracks itself. See it's first commit of itself
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Resistance against London tube map commit history (a.k.a. git merge hell) (2015)
Look at any PR/patch series that got merged into the Git project. https://github.com/git/git/
Any random one. Because those that did not meet the minimum criteria for a well-crafted history would not have passed review.
- GitHub Git Mirror Down
- Four ways to solve the "Remote Origin Already Exists" error.
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So You Think You Know Git – Git Tips and Tricks by Scott Chacon
Boy, I can't find this either (but also, the kernel mailing list is _really_ difficult to search). I really remember Linus saying something like "it's not a real SCM, but maybe someone could build one on top of it someday" or something like that, but I cannot figure out how to find that.
You _can_ see, though, that in his first README, he refers to what he's building as not a "real SCM":
https://github.com/git/git/commit/e83c5163316f89bfbde7d9ab23...
- Maintain-Git.txt
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Git Commit Messages by Jeff King
Here is the direct link, as HN somehow removes the query string: https://github.com/git/git/commits?author=peff&since=2023-10...
- Git commit messages by Jeff King
- My favourite Git commit (2019)
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Do we think of Git commits as diffs, snapshots, and/or histories?
I understand all that.
I'm saying, if you write a survey and one of the possible answers is "diff", but you don't clearly define what you mean by "diff", then don't be surprised if respondents use any reasonable definition that makes sense to them. Ask an ambiguous question, get a mishmash of answers.
The thing that Git uses for packfiles is called a "delta" by Git, but it's also reasonable to call it a "diff". After all, Git's delta algorithm is "greatly inspired by parts of LibXDiff from Davide Libenzi"[1]. Not LibXDelta but LibXDiff.
Yes, how Git stores blobs (using deltas) is orthogonal to how Git uses blobs. But while that orthogonality is useful for reasoning about Git, it's not wrong to think of a commit as the totality of what Git does, including that optimization. (Some people, when learning Git, stumble over the way it's described as storing full copies, think it's wasteful. For them to wrap their heads around Git, they have to understand that the optimization exists. Which makes sense because Git probably wouldn't be practical if it lacked that optimization.)
The reason I'm bringing all this up is, if you're trying to explain Git, which is what the original article is about, then it's very important to keep in mind that someone who is learning Git needs to know what you mean when you say "diff". Most people who already know Git would tend to gravitate toward the definition of "diff" that you're assuming (the thing that Git computes on the fly and never stores), but people who already know Git aren't the target audience when you're teaching Git.
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[1] https://github.com/git/git/blob/master/diff-delta.c
What are some alternatives?
nashorn - https://openjdk.org/projects/nashorn
scalar - Scalar: A set of tools and extensions for Git to allow very large monorepos to run on Git without a virtualization layer
LedFx - LedFx is a network based LED effect engine designed to deliver advanced real-time audio effects to a wide variety of devices.
PineappleCAS - A generic computer algebra system targeted for the TI-84+ CE calculators
cheetah - On-device streaming speech-to-text engine powered by deep learning
Subversion - Mirror of Apache Subversion
picovoice - On-device voice assistant platform powered by deep learning
vscode-gitlens - Supercharge Git inside VS Code and unlock untapped knowledge within each repository — Visualize code authorship at a glance via Git blame annotations and CodeLens, seamlessly navigate and explore Git repositories, gain valuable insights via rich visualizations and powerful comparison commands, and so much more
F# - Please file issues or pull requests here: https://github.com/dotnet/fsharp
linux - Linux kernel source tree
Caster - Dragonfly-Based Voice Programming and Accessibility Toolkit
chromebrew - Package manager for Chrome OS [Moved to: https://github.com/chromebrew/chromebrew]