Looking at projects that are good candidates for being re-written in rust / webassembly!
https://www.npmjs.com/package/moment-timezone
could build off work in rust: https://github.com/chronotope/chrono
| From: Ian Lance Taylor | |
| After many discussions and reading many comments, we plan to move | |
| forward with some changes and clarifications to the generics design | |
| draft. | |
| 1. | |
| We’re going to settle on square brackets for the generics syntax. | |
| We’re going to drop the “type” keyword before type parameters, as | 
Looking at projects that are good candidates for being re-written in rust / webassembly!
https://www.npmjs.com/package/moment-timezone
could build off work in rust: https://github.com/chronotope/chrono
| package main | |
| import ( | |
| "crypto/tls" | |
| "crypto/x509" | |
| "errors" | |
| "io/ioutil" | |
| "log" | |
| "time" | |
| ) | 
I've been deceiving you all. I had you believe that Svelte was a UI framework — unlike React and Vue etc, because it shifts work out of the client and into the compiler, but a framework nonetheless.
But that's not exactly accurate. In my defense, I didn't realise it myself until very recently. But with Svelte 3 around the corner, it's time to come clean about what Svelte really is.
Svelte is a language.
Specifically, Svelte is an attempt to answer a question that many people have asked, and a few have answered: what would it look like if we had a language for describing reactive user interfaces?
A few projects that have answered this question:
| package crypto | |
| import ( | |
| "errors" | |
| "strings" | |
| "golang.org/x/crypto/bcrypt" | |
| ) | |
| //Hash implements root.Hash | 
| -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- | |
| -- -- | |
| -- mysql -- | |
| -- -- | |
| -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- | |
| -- | |
| -- mysql <http://sqlfiddle.com/#!9/91afb5/2> | |
| -- note: sqlfiddle is very stupid | 
| package main | |
| // http://play.golang.org/p/jZ5pa944O1 <- will not display the colors | |
| import "fmt" | |
| const ( | |
| InfoColor = "\033[1;34m%s\033[0m" | |
| NoticeColor = "\033[1;36m%s\033[0m" | |
| WarningColor = "\033[1;33m%s\033[0m" | |
| ErrorColor = "\033[1;31m%s\033[0m" | |
| DebugColor = "\033[0;36m%s\033[0m" | 
| /* | |
| ******************************************************************************** | |
| Golang - Asterisk and Ampersand Cheatsheet | |
| ******************************************************************************** | |
| Also available at: https://play.golang.org/p/lNpnS9j1ma | |
| Allowed: | |
| -------- | |
| p := Person{"Steve", 28} stores the value | 
| // Source: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/angular/hVrkvaHGOfc | |
| // jsFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/pkozlowski_opensource/PxdSP/14/ | |
| // author: Pawel Kozlowski | |
| var myApp = angular.module('myApp', []); | |
| //service style, probably the simplest one | |
| myApp.service('helloWorldFromService', function() { | |
| this.sayHello = function() { | |
| return "Hello, World!" |