uiua
kotlingrad
uiua | kotlingrad | |
---|---|---|
9 | 3 | |
1,384 | 508 | |
4.7% | - | |
10.0 | 3.8 | |
3 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
Rust | Kotlin | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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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.
uiua
- Borrow Checking, RC, GC, and the Eleven () Other Memory Safety Approaches
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Array Languages vs. the Curse of the Spreadsheet
This is what I love in Uiua[1]. That operators can be written as english words instead of unicode symbols. Makes it quite similar looking to functuinal point free code.
[1]: https://www.uiua.org/
- KamilaLisp – A functional, flexible and concise Lisp
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k on pdp11
you may also enjoy uiua (https://www.uiua.org/) which uses these alien glyphs but is even more alien because it's a concatenative language (stack oriented), like forth or postscript, but to make it even more alien it's written right to left. For example 1+2 is written "+ 1 2" (in forth it would be "1 2 +")
The language and the site are brilliant and I think worth 30m of your time skimming through and trying out the examples in the online editor / tutorial.
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-❄️- 2023 Day 11 Solutions -❄️-
From https://www.uiua.org/
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Attempting each AOC in a language starting with each letter of the alphabet
If you're fine with tacit array-oriented (ie APL-like): Uiua.
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Vector database is not a separate database category
As a lover of array languages, I remember being excited to read a futurist article on vector processors and programming languages. It was written right before Wes McKinney worked on Pandas (the J programming language influenced him), and I thought J/APL or another array language was going to explode. J has Jd, in which J is fully integrated. This did not come to pass (yet). No matter, I still enjoy array languages anyway. There's a new array language, uiua[1], that is a mix of array and stack concepts with a good standard library including audio and graphics.
[1] https://www.uiua.org/
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Uiua: A minimal stack-based, array-based language
Yeah
> The main language that inspired Uiua is BQN. While I had heard about APL before, BQN was my first real exposure to the power of the array paradigm. I think the language is an astounding feat of engineering. Marshall is both a genius and a great communicator.
https://www.uiua.org/docs/design
Also, a week ago there were only two contributors to the project: 1000+ by kaikalii, and this single commit by Marshall:
https://github.com/uiua-lang/uiua/pull/1/files
kotlingrad
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Trade-Offs in Automatic Differentiation: TensorFlow, PyTorch, Jax, and Julia
and that there is a mature library for autodiff https://github.com/breandan/kotlingrad
- Show HN: Shape-Safe Symbolic Differentiation with Algebraic Data Types
- Kotlin∇: Type-safe Symbolic Differentiation for the JVM
What are some alternatives?
bqnpad - Online REPL for BQN
lets-plot-kotlin - Grammar of Graphics for Kotlin
BQN - An APL-like programming language. Self-hosted!
kmath - Kotlin mathematics extensions library
related_post_gen - Data Processing benchmark featuring Rust, Go, Swift, Zig, Julia etc.
kinference - Running ONNX models in vanilla Kotlin
edina - Edina - A simple stack-oriented compiled programming language.
dex-lang - Research language for array processing in the Haskell/ML family
cognate - A human readable quasi-concatenative programming language
kotlindl - High-level Deep Learning Framework written in Kotlin and inspired by Keras
ivy - ivy, an APL-like calculator
sqlite-vss - A SQLite extension for efficient vector search, based on Faiss!