Programming: Rust, JS, Python, Perl, and More
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Rust Compiler Midyear Report for 2022 | Inside Rust Blog
Back in February, the compiler team posted a collection of concrete initiatives and hopeful aspirations for this year. This post is a midyear report summarizing the progress so far on all of those items.
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Each work item, regardless of whether it had resources committed or not, had an associated owner. To construct this progress report, pnkfelix sent each owner a survey (you can see what it looks like here). In fact, some work items had multiple subprojects, each with its own owner. This meant there were actually a total of 22 projects for which we received an update. This blog post is the compilation (ha ha) of those survey results.
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atuf.app: Amsterdam Toilet & Urinal Finder - FoolControl: Phear the penguin
atuf.app is a Python web app made to work great on both mobile and desktop environments. After app is run, every action will be performed automatically. From fetching (scraping) data from Maps Amsterdam to performing data manipulation on it, and then displaying processed data on a map using Folium (Python Data, Leaflet.js Maps) project. App container image is also built & released using automated scripts after which it’s deployed to RPI Kubernetes cluster running in my home.
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Perl Weekly Challenge 177: Damm Algorithm and Palindromic Prime Cyclops
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akudo Weekly News: 2022.32 2nd Conf
Two days of just stuff about the Raku Programing Language at the second Raku Conference this weekend. Online only, alas. Hopefully in person next year! Ah, and if you would like to give a lightning talk, there’s still room for that! And don’t forget to register if you haven’t already!
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Create Next.js MongoDB Powered App in 10 minutes with This Open-source Boilerplate
Next.js is an opens-source React framework for building scalable web applications. It supports static website generation, and server-side rendering.
Next.js comes with full TypeScript support, fast bundling, client routing, pre-fetching, and it does not require extensive configuration like its competitors.
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DeWalt gave my power tool battery the power of USB-C
The $100 DeWalt DCB094 USB Charging Kit lets you add that port to any DeWalt 20V power tool battery in a literal snap. Slide this quarter-pound adapter onto your battery pack, and you get a bi-directional 100W USB-C PD port. That means not only can you charge up to a MacBook Pro-sized laptop with a big enough DeWalt pack, you can charge those DeWalt packs with your laptop or phone’s USB-C charger as well.