Roslyn-linq-rewrite
Roslyn
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Roslyn-linq-rewrite | Roslyn | |
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0 | 87 | |
695 | 15,917 | |
- | 1.4% | |
0.0 | 10.0 | |
over 2 years ago | about 7 hours ago | |
C# | C# | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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Roslyn-linq-rewrite
We haven't tracked posts mentioning Roslyn-linq-rewrite yet.
Tracking mentions began in Dec 2020.
Roslyn
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Method overloading error in 2022 and I don't know why.
Local functions do not support overloading
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Why does foreach on arrays and strings get lowered into a while loop that ignores IEnumerable, even though both classes implement it?
Honestly, I don't have a clue why these would be different. I found the relevant Roslyn code here. You can see on line 719 that this is definitely intentional:
- .Net 6.0 - The new Program.cs "flat" style - too implicit/magic?
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Why is Python so popular?
compiler: https://github.com/dotnet/roslyn
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How to call a variable from a string, if that make sense lol
Why not use Roslyn Scripting…you can pretty much do any kind of dynamic evaluation with this and it does not require any reflection. https://github.com/dotnet/roslyn/blob/main/docs/wiki/Scripting-API-Samples.md you can add the support via a Nuget.
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What’s the maximum number of arguments for method in C# and in .NET?
It was discussed at one point: https://github.com/dotnet/roslyn/issues/5058
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What parsing techniques do you use to support a good language server?
It must be a fairly large echo chamber since it has room for Clang, GCC, V8, OpenJDK, Roslyn, etc. (The Zend parser for PHP seems to use some flavor of YACC, but given PHP, I don't know if that strengthens or weakens my point.)
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Why is no-one using Roslyn token-based code generation with Source Generators?
I'm planning to rewrite all of our company's old T4-based codegen tools into Source Generators. I've been looking at how other Source Generators are implemented and what surprised me is that everyone seems to assemble the output code manually as text with string builders or at best some simple templating engine (eg. Scriban). I expected that I would see a lot of projects assembling their output code from Roslyn tokens and then using Roslyn's formatter to produce the actual code that can be emitted into the output file(s), like this article demonstrates. No-one seem to be doing that though. Why?
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Actix Web v4.0 (Rust)
Clearly nobody ever manages to use this Go thing with over 700: https://github.com/golang/go/issues. Or .net, over 5000 issues for the compiler alone: https://github.com/dotnet/roslyn. I'd guess stuff like Java, glibc would be similar if they used github
What are some alternatives?
Mono-basic - Visual Basic Compiler and Runtime
LinqOptimizer - An automatic query optimizer-compiler for Sequential and Parallel LINQ.
F# - Please file issues or pull requests here: https://github.com/dotnet/fsharp
Bridge.NET - :spades: C# to JavaScript compiler. Write modern mobile and web apps in C#. Run anywhere with Bridge.NET.
MSBuild - The Microsoft Build Engine (MSBuild) is the build platform for .NET and Visual Studio.
SharpLab - .NET language playground
ClojureCLR - A port of Clojure to the CLR, part of the Clojure project
Fable: F# |> BABEL - F# to JavaScript Compiler
VisualFSharp - The F# compiler, F# core library, F# language service, and F# tooling integration for Visual Studio
.NET Runtime - .NET is a cross-platform runtime for cloud, mobile, desktop, and IoT apps.
csharp-source-generators - A list of C# Source Generators (not necessarily awesome) and associated resources: articles, talks, demos.