Browse Twitter without JavaScript.
If regular Haskell is too easy for you, try these.
A configuration language that is also a statically typed, Turing-incomplete programming language with guaranteed termination.
You can use it to write refactorable configuration files.
Canβt be worse than YAML.
A doctest implementation for Cabal.
A keyboard customization tool for Windows, macOS, and GNU/Linux.
An ACME (LetsEncrypt) client as a shell script.
A XeTeX- and TeXLive-based self-contained, reproducible typesetting engine. Can also be used as a Rust library.
A local radio broadcast from Kishiwada, Osaka (ε²Έεη°εΈ).
I like them because their talk radio Japanese is easy to follow and their music is just my style and mostly in Japanese as well.
Parses a subset of LaTeX into an AST and converts it into XML or any of a number of output formats (EPUB, MathML, etc.).
To be honest, I am a bit disappointed that it is necessary to use a separate tool to do this in the first place.
Say you want to write a book and publish it in both printed and ebook form and ideally also have a customizable, stylable web version of it with good navigation and accessibility, what format are you supposed to write it in if not LaTeX? DocBook? AsciiDoc? Scribble?
One interesting point: Adverse effects are significantly smaller (both in strength and frequency) in the BioNTechβPfizer vaccine than in the Moderna vaccine; others we donβt know enough about yet.
A C library that you can use to build native binaries that are portable between Linux, macOS, various BSDs, and Windows. An impressive hack.
Generalized categorical Haskell base type classes with class constraints.
A simple systems programming language.
A terse, yet easy to follow walk through some of the higher-level GHC language extensions. Features DataKinds
, TypeFamilies
, and UndecidableInstances
among others.
Integrates Rust into CMake projects. Useful for when youβve got an existing C++ project that you want to add some Rust code to.
A small Lisp on top of Lua. Useful wherever Lua is used to script things.
A binary cache for Nix builds. Makes use of Nix’s reproducible and pure nature to share build artifacts between yourself and your colleagues and even your CI, too.
Easy forms for JavaFX.
Various controls and utilities for JavaFX applications.
A JavaFX theme based on Microsoft’s Metro design (or Fluent Design System as they call it nowadays).
If you plan to check out the GitHub repo, note that you have to switch to the 11
branch unless you are still on Java 8.