ugrep-benchmarks
benchmarks
ugrep-benchmarks | benchmarks | |
---|---|---|
5 | 40 | |
20 | 2,747 | |
- | - | |
6.6 | 7.2 | |
5 days ago | 4 months ago | |
Shell | Makefile | |
- | MIT License |
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ugrep-benchmarks
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Ugrep – a more powerful, ultra fast, user-friendly, compatible grep
I really like the fuzzy match feature. Useful for typos or off by 1-2 characters.
https://github.com/Genivia/ugrep#fuzzy
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Scrybble is the ReMarkable highlights to Obsidian exporter I have been looking for
🔎🗃️ ripgrep or ugrep (search fast, use regex patterns or fuzzy search, pipe output to bash/zsh shell for further processing V coloring)
- Ugrep: Ultra fast grep with Boolean, fuzzy, archive and documents search
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ugrep 4.0 released + performance benchmarks
The updated performance benchmarks demonstrate that ugrep 4.0 is pretty fast on x64 and ARM64 machines. Even so, ugrep will continue to evolve to increase its search speeds and add new features in the future.
benchmarks
- Some Benchmarks of Different Languages
- Building a high performance JSON parser
- Top 5 Fastest Programming Languages
- Twitter (re)Releases Recommendation Algorithm on GitHub
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How green or energy efficient is the Go programming language?
GitHub - kostya/benchmarks: Some benchmarks of different languages
- how to benchmark a programming language
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Ruby 3.2.0 Is from Another Dimension
In all the language comparisons I've found over the years, Python consistently comes out slightly slower, for example:
https://github.com/kostya/benchmarks
Bearing in mind these are probably not even using YJIT, which makes Ruby considerably faster in some scenarios.
- I made a 88x88 version of the big display image command generator in Python! (will share github link if admins allow it)
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The original computer languages benchmark is back
Also, here is another benchmark: https://github.com/kostya/benchmarks
- Why does Scala seem to be slow at benchmark results?
What are some alternatives?
urgrep - Universal recursive grep for Emacs
libuv - Cross-platform asynchronous I/O
grepedit
lua-languages - Languages that compile to Lua
ugrep - ugrep 5.1: A more powerful, ultra fast, user-friendly, compatible grep. Includes a TUI, Google-like Boolean search with AND/OR/NOT, fuzzy search, hexdumps, searches (nested) archives (zip, 7z, tar, pax, cpio), compressed files (gz, Z, bz2, lzma, xz, lz4, zstd, brotli), pdfs, docs, and more
julia - The Julia Programming Language
test-profiles - A read-only Git copy of the OpenBenchmarking.org test profiles.
beartype - Unbearably fast near-real-time hybrid runtime-static type-checking in pure Python.
rmscene - Read v6 .rm files from the reMarkable tablet
mypyc - Compile type annotated Python to fast C extensions
learn_gnugrep_ripgrep - Example based guide to mastering GNU grep and ripgrep
Cython - The most widely used Python to C compiler