scala-steward
lila
scala-steward | lila | |
---|---|---|
4 | 795 | |
1,122 | 14,578 | |
0.2% | 0.7% | |
9.3 | 10.0 | |
6 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Scala | Scala | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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.
scala-steward
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Secure the Dependencies of your Scala Project on Github
To not confuse anyone reading this, these are actually pretty radically different. Keep in mind that Renovate is literally just doing regex on your build files. While this is great for simple things and sending in some updates, I know first hand this is far inferior to the update support you'll get by using something like Scala Steward.
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Looking for a really good/complex example codebase or tutorial for Scala FP
https://github.com/scala-steward-org/scala-steward Might be the one you are looking for
- Scala projects to read through
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Software Is Drowning the World
This is one of the reasons why statically typed languages have a big advantage when it comes to maintenance.
Take Scala for example. There is now mature tooling for keeping your dependencies / libraries up-to-date automatically, using automatic migration-scripts (must be provided by the library author of course).
See here: https://github.com/scala-steward-org/scala-steward/blob/mast...
The difficult part here is of course to write the migrations. This works very well in Scala (and can work as well in certain other languages) because the type-system provides enough information to do automatic rewrites and it is easy to _not_ use unsound techniques such as reflection, code generation, macros etc.
The reason why we don't see such tooling in other languages yet is that they are either dynamically typed, which makes it almost impossible to write migration scripts that pretty much always work. Or they are statically typed, but the typesystem is so limited, that developers have to fall back on mentioned unsound features.
lila
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How to make a Lichess bot in Python
Once you’re finished, we’re going to set up a lichess bot account. Head over to https://lichess.org/ and create a new account.
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Lessons from Open-Source Game Projects
Lichess - Online Chess Server. Scala, TypeScript
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Avoid blundering: 80% of a winning strategy
> the player who committed more blunders lost 86% of the time
In some sense this is almost tautological. While finding an exact definition for a chess blunder isn't straightforward, here is one example from the Lichess UI:
https://github.com/lichess-org/lila/blob/b527746b179cdde6438...
Basically, if you make a move which decreases your winning probability more than 14% over the best move, that's a blunder. But winning probability is a nonlinear function of stockfish centipawns. A drop in 100 centipawns when you're up 15 points isn't a blunder. When the game was equal, it is.
Point is, by the time you know it's a blunder you already know something about the outcome of that move, that it swung the winning probability by more than 14%. So the analysis is kind of just measuring some function of winning probability and saying that it is highly correlated with winning probability.
- How I hacked chess.com with a rookie exploit
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So bad at chess that it’s genuinely upsetting at this point, I need some hope
If you want to improve make it your goal to play the best chess you can, not increase an arbitrary number. Watch YouTube series like John Bartholomew's "Climb the Rating Ladder" for some general insight into what you might be doing wrong. Read Irving Chernev's "Logical Chess: Move By Move" to see the thinking process of high level players. Do lots of puzzles (I like lichess.org for puzzles). And always analyze your games. When you analyze make it your goal to find at least two things you could have improved.
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Humans vs. Stockfish’s eval function
The easiest way to play against Stockfish is perhaps on https://lichess.org/, but it's not the only chess engine that evaluates positions with a neural network.
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Venruki’s take on the current issues with PvP
Lichess.com
- Death wants to take you, but you can challenge it to a game (virtual or not) to stay. what do you play?
- Ask HN: What fuel for my data furnace?
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The DGPT season opener will be sponsored by chess.com!
if you actually like chess, try lichess.org, the free and open-source, no ads ever, premium alternative
What are some alternatives?
renovate - Universal dependency automation tool.
listudy - Listudy - chess training server
codemod - Codemod is a tool/library to assist you with large-scale codebase refactors that can be partially automated but still require human oversight and occasional intervention. Codemod was developed at Facebook and released as open source.
Mindustry - The automation tower defense RTS
pfps-shopping-cart - :shopping_cart: The Shopping Cart application developed in the book "Practical FP in Scala: A hands-on approach"
Anki-Chess-2.0 - An interactive chess template for anki.
scalac-options - A DSL for scalacOptions
katrain - Improve your Baduk skills by training with KataGo!
Gitbucket - A Git platform powered by Scala with easy installation, high extensibility & GitHub API compatibility
monkeytype - The most customizable typing website with a minimalistic design and a ton of features. Test yourself in various modes, track your progress and improve your speed.
zio-cats-backend - A backend service integrating ZIO with cats, STTP, http4s, doobie and ztapir
maia-chess - Maia is a human-like neural network chess engine trained on millions of human games.