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Joel Bennett

RRDtool -- Round-Robin Database graphing - 0 views

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    RRDtool is the OpenSource industry standard, high performance data logging and graphing system for time series data ... has interfaces in all the usual open source scripting languages
Joel Bennett

Being Popular - 0 views

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    What makes a programming language successful?
Joel Bennett

Expect - Wikipedia - 0 views

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    Expect is an extension to the Tcl scripting language to create an automation and testing tool for CLI applications such as telnet, ftp, passwd, fsck, rlogin, tip, ssh, et., and because it wraps the standard command-line interface, it can be used to automate any arbitrary applications that are accessed over a terminal.
Joel Bennett

IronPython Studio - Home - 1 views

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    IronPython Studio is a free full IDE for the Python programming language based on the existing IronPython example and the Visual Studio 2008 Shell runtime ... and doesn't need Visual Studio installed
anonymous

PureMVC - 1 views

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    PureMVC is a lightweight framework for creating applications based upon the classic Model, View and Controller concept. Based upon proven design patterns, this free, open source framework which was originally implemented in the ActionScript 3 language for use with Adobe Flex, Flash and AIR, is now being ported to all major development platforms.
Joel Bennett

Shoes (GUI for Ruby) The Tutorial Walkthrough - 0 views

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    A fluent forms language for ruby
Joel Bennett

PS Expect: PowerShell Scripts for Testing - CodePlex - 0 views

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    A project to implement xUnit-style Assert-* functions to make it easier to use PowerShell as a testing language.
Denis Gobo

Collection Of Puzzles For Programmers - 1 views

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    A nice collection of puzzles. Some are harder than others so there is something for everyone. You can pic any language you want, you will see that there are solutions in Ruby, Python, Visual Basic, SQL, JavaScript, C++ and others
Joel Bennett

F# (FSharp) - Microsoft Research - 0 views

  • F# is a programming language that provides the much sought-after combination of type safety, performance and scripting,
    • Joel Bennett
       
      In .Net ...
Joel Bennett

ColorCode - Syntax Highlighting/Colorization for .NET - Release: ColorCode 1.0 - 0 views

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    ColorCode is the syntax highlighting code which supports CodePlex
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    ColorCode is the syntax highlighting code which supports CodePlex -- will someone PLEASE write a PowerShell language for it and donate it to them?
Matteo Spreafico

Joe Duffy's Weblog - OnBeingStateful - 0 views

  • The biggest question left unanswered in my mind is the role state will play in software of the future.
  • The biggest question left unanswered in my mind is the role state will play in software of the future. That seems like an absurd statement, or a naïve one at the very least.  State is everywhere: The values held in memory. Data locally on disk. Data in-flight that is being sent over a network. Data stored in the cloud, including on a database, remote filesystem, etc. Certainly all of these kinds of state will continue to exist far into the future.  Data is king, and is one major factor that will drive the shift to parallel computing.  The question then is how will concurrent programs interact with this state, read and mutate it, and what isolation and synchronization mechanisms are necessary to do so?
  • Many programs have ample gratuitous dependencies, simply because of the habits we’ve grown accustomed to over 30 odd years of imperative programming.  Our education, mental models, books, best-of-breed algorithms, libraries, and languages all push us in this direction.  We like to scribble intermediary state into shared variables because it’s simple to do so and because it maps to our von Neumann model of how the computer works.
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  • We need to get rid of these gratuitous dependencies.  Merely papering over them with a transaction—making them “safe”—doesn’t do anything to improve the natural parallelism that a program contains.  It just ensures it doesn’t crash.  Sure, that’s plenty important, but providing programming models and patterns to eliminate the gratuitous dependencies also achieves the goal of not crashing but with the added benefit of actually improving scalability too.  Transactions have worked so well in enabling automatic parallelism in databases because the basic model itself (without transactions) already implies natural isolation among queries.  Transactions break down and scalability suffers for programs that aren’t architected in this way.  We should learn from the experience of the database community in this regard
  • There will always be hidden mutation of shared state inside lower level system components.  These are often called “benevolent side-effects,” thanks to Hoare, and apply to things like lazy initialization and memorization caches.  These will be done by concurrency ninjas who understand locks.  And their effects will be isolated by convention.
  • Even with all of this support, we’d be left with an ecosystem of libraries like the .NET Framework itself which have been built atop a fundamentally mutable and imperative system.  The path forward here is less clear to me, although having the ability to retain a mutable model within pockets of guaranteed isolation certainly makes me think the libraries are salvageable.  Thankfully, the shift will likely be very gradual, and the pieces that pose substantial problems can be rewritten in place incrementally over time.  But we need the fundamental language and type system support first.
Jungle Jar

JungleJar | Featured Web Application: PHPanywhere.net - 0 views

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    This is an extremely cool and useful web application, and if it hasn't been thought of before, I'm absolutely shocked, because it makes so much sense. Essentially, PHPanywhere is a web based free Integrated Development Environment or IDE for the PHP language. In other words it is a web based application that provides PHP developers a PHP code editor that mocks a desktop application, and it does so very well.
David Corking

Erik Naggum on attributes in SGML/XML, Enamel (NML), Lisp - 0 views

  • Whether something is an attribute or element is _completely_ arbitrary.
  • Whether something is an attribute or element is _completely_ arbitrary.
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    The "Naggum Markup Language" - a tidy way of expressing XML element trees with attributes.
Fabien Cadet

Threads Cannot be Implemented as a Library - Boehm, Hans-J. - 0 views

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    Abstract: In many environments, multi-threaded code is written in a language that was originally designed without thread support (e.g. C), to which a library of threading primitives was subsequently added. [...] We provide specific arguments that a pure library approach, in which the compiler is designed independently of threading issues, cannot guarantee correctness of the resulting code. [...]
David Corking

Re: Ruby's lisp features. | ruby-talk | 2006 | Yukihiro Matsumoto - 0 views

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    The designer of Ruby renamed his language "MatzLisp"
Joel Bennett

Code Contracts - MSDN DevLabs - 0 views

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    Code Contracts provide a language-agnostic way to express coding assumptions in .NET programs. The contracts take the form of pre-conditions, post-conditions, and object invariants. Contracts act as checked documentation of your external and internal APIs.
Joel Bennett

Isolation, Agents, and Message-passing in .NET - Axum Team Blog - 0 views

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    This is the team blog for the Microsoft Research team working on "Axum" (another parallel programming language for .Net).
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