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The State of OCaml (invited talk) — by Xavier Leroy
Inline Assembly in OCaml — by Vladimir Brankov
Specialization of Generic Array Accesses After Inlining — by Ryohei Tokuda, Eijiro Sumii, Akinori Abe
Eduardo is a streamer and a tech lead at @Marigold_Dev. Join us in this episode to casually talk about OCaml, Tezos and probably compilers If you'd like to support the show for more content about OCaml, Reason and ReScript you can now do so at...
Operf: Benchmarking the OCaml Compiler — by Pierre Chambart, Fabrice Le Fessant, Vincent Bernardoff
Craig Ferguson is a software developer at Tarides. Join us in this episode to talk more about OCaml, MirageOS, Irmin and much more! We are looking for sponsors! If you'd like to support more content for Ocaml, Reason and ReScript just send us a...
James Somers is Jane Street’s writer-in-residence, splitting his time between English and OCaml, and helping to push forward all sorts of efforts around knowledge-sharing at Jane Street. In this episode, James and Ron talk about the role of technical writing in an organization like Jane Street, and how engineering software relates to editing prose. Some links to topics that came up in the discussion: mdx, the modified Markdown format that supports executing OCaml code blocks: https://github.com/realworldocaml/mdx More on the 4 types of technical writing that James references: https://documentation.divio.com/introduction/ Donald Knuth’s original book on Literate Programming: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literate_programming More on John McPhee’s use of KEDIT: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2013/01/14/structure Peter Seibel’s Coders at Work: https://codersatwork.com/ David Goodsell’s The Machinery of Life: https://books.google.com/books/about/The_Machinery_of_Life.html?id=0nV-mIqPa5gC Scott Huler’s Defining the Wind: https://books.google.com/books?id=oqGUXPWbieMC Some of James’s writing on our tech blog: https://blog.janestreet.com/author/jsomers/ You can find the transcript for this episode and all past episodes at signalsandthreads.com.
James Somers is Jane Street’s writer-in-residence, splitting his time between English and OCaml, and helping to push forward all sorts of efforts around knowledge-sharing at Jane Street. In this episode, James and Ron talk about the role of technical writing in an organization like Jane Street, and how engineering software relates to editing prose. Some links to topics that came up in the discussion: mdx, the modified Markdown format that supports executing OCaml code blocks: https://github.com/realworldocaml/mdx More on the 4 types of technical writing that James references: https://documentation.divio.com/introduction/ Donald Knuth’s original book on Literate Programming: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literate_programming More on John McPhee’s use of KEDIT: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2013/01/14/structure Peter Seibel’s Coders at Work: https://codersatwork.com/ David Goodsell’s The Machinery of Life: https://books.google.com/books/about/The_Machinery_of_Life.html?id=0nV-mIqPa5gC Scott Huler’s Defining the Wind: https://books.google.com/books?id=oqGUXPWbieMC Some of James’s writing on our tech blog: https://blog.janestreet.com/author/jsomers/ You can find the transcript for this episode and all past episodes at signalsandthreads.com.
Semgrep, which stands for “semantic grep,” is a fast, lightweight, polyglot, open source static analysis tool to find bugs and enforce code standards. It is used internally by many companies including Dropbox and Snowflake. Semgrep is also now use...
