Showing 12 open source projects for "a i"

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    Application Monitoring That Won't Slow Your App Down

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  • 1
    stylish-haskell

    stylish-haskell

    Haskell code prettifier

    A simple Haskell code prettifier. The goal is not to format all of the code in a file since I find that kind of tools often "get in the way". However, manually cleaning up import statements, etc. gets tedious very quickly. This tool tries to help where necessary without getting in the way. Aligns and sorts import statements. Groups and wraps {-# LANGUAGE #-} pragmas, can remove (some) redundant pragmas. Removes trailing whitespace.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 2
    The Aura Package Manager

    The Aura Package Manager

    A secure, multilingual package manager for Arch Linux

    ...-S yields pacman packages and only pacman packages. This agrees with the above. In Aura, the -A operation is introduced for obtaining AUR packages. -A comes with sub-options you're used to (-u, -s, -i, etc.). PKGBUILDs from the AUR can contain anything. It's a user's responsibility to verify the contents of a PKGBUILD before building, but people can make mistakes and overlook details.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 3
    pandoc-crossref filter

    pandoc-crossref filter

    Pandoc filter for cross-references

    ...Bear in mind that those are a product of automated build scripts, and as such, provided as-is, with zero guarantees. Feel free to open issues if those don't work though, I'll try to do what I can.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 4
    Kitten

    Kitten

    A statically typed concatenative systems programming language

    ...Programs are composed by chaining small words that transform a typed stack, and the compiler uses type inference to ensure compositions are valid. The language explores disciplined handling of side effects, aiming to separate pure transformations from operations that perform I/O or mutate state. Its design encourages small, reusable building blocks that compose cleanly, while still permitting low-level control where performance matters. The implementation targets efficient compiled code and investigates how advanced type systems can improve reliability in a stack-based language. As a research project, Kitten serves both as a language to experiment with and as a vehicle for ideas about safety and structure in concatenative programming.
    Downloads: 4 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • Fully Managed MySQL, PostgreSQL, and SQL Server Icon
    Fully Managed MySQL, PostgreSQL, and SQL Server

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  • 5
    Nix Output Monitor

    Nix Output Monitor

    Pipe your nix-build output through the nix-output-monitor

    ...This was an experiment to write something fun and useful in Haskell, which proved to be useful to quite a lot of people. By now, nom is quite fully featured with support for nix v1 commands (e.g. nix-build) and nix v2 commands (e.g. nix build). At this point it seems like I will maintain nom until better UX options for nix arrive. Every entry in the nom tree stands for one derivation. No build will be printed twice in the tree, it will only be shown for the lowermost dependency. Use the colors from above to read the summary.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 6
    Asterius

    Asterius

    A Haskell to WebAssembly compiler

    Asterius is a Haskell toolchain that compiles to WebAssembly, enabling Haskell programs to run in the browser and other Wasm hosts. It builds on GHC, lowers Haskell code to WebAssembly modules, and links them with a lightweight JavaScript runtime for I/O, GC interaction, and host integration. The toolchain provides commands to build and link (ahc/ahc-link), bundle assets, and target both browser and Node environments. Interop is a core focus: Haskell functions can call into JavaScript and vice versa, making it feasible to combine Haskell logic with web APIs. Asterius aims to keep as much of Haskell’s runtime model as practical while delivering the portability and startup characteristics of Wasm. ...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 7
    Yesod

    Yesod

    A RESTful Haskell web framework built on WAI

    Yesod is a high-performance web framework for Haskell focused on enabling productive development of type-safe, RESTful web applications. It leverages Haskell's strong static typing, compile-time safety checks, Template Haskell, and domain-specific quasiquoters to ensure high reliability and performance. Safety & security guaranteed at compile time. Developer productivity: tools for all your basic web development needs. Raw performance, fast, compiled code. Techniques for constant-space...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 8

    m372tools

    Tool set for m372 project

    A set of (hopefully generic) tools that I intend to use in my m372 project.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 9
    HaLVM

    HaLVM

    The Haskell Lightweight Virtual Machine (HaLVM)

    ...Instead of deploying a full operating system, you compile a Haskell program into a tiny image that boots as its own VM, which reduces the attack surface and startup time. The project adapts GHC and the Haskell runtime to a minimal environment, providing the I/O, networking, and memory facilities necessary for standalone services. Its design encourages highly isolated services—each VM does one job—making it attractive for security-sensitive components and research on microservice-style architectures. Developers get to keep Haskell’s strong typing, concurrency abstractions, and functional style while targeting bare virtual hardware. ...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 10
    Simula

    Simula

    Linux VR Desktop

    ...Compared to other VR Desktops, Simula allows for longer sessions without uncomfortable eye strain. In Simula, VR Windows become “active” once you look at them. Active windows receive (i) typing events from the keyboard and (ii) cursor events from any mouse movement.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 11
    Creep

    Creep

    a pretty sweet 4px wide pixel font

    A pretty sweet 4px wide pixel font. I never found the pixel font that was perfect for me, so I decided to roll my own with creep. It is a pretty compact (only 4px wide!) font that's great for smaller screens (like my 11" laptop). I'm constantly adding in new characters (diacritics, box-drawing characters, etc.), so I figured I'd put it up on GitHub for people to reap benefits of this.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 12
    A small command-line calculator, written in Haskell, that takes input like "14+(12+24)/(8.5-2.5)" and prints out the result. It's nothing special really, just a little project I did to learn Haskell.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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