blaisorblade.github.io
Welcome to My New Blog! - Paolo G. Giarrusso’s blog & website
http://blaisorblade.github.io/blog/2015/01/15/welcome-to-my-new-blog
Paolo G. Giarrusso’s blog and website. Welcome to My New Blog! Welcome to my new blog! I am a PhD student in Programming Languages, and my blog will focus on programming, programming languages (especially Scala and Haskell) and my research interests. After my last blog. I’ve finally decided to start blogging again. I’ve finally decided to switch to a Jekyll-style workflow (courtesy of Octopress). Posted by Paolo G. Giarrusso. A talk on Incremental λ-Calculus ». A Talk on Incremental λ-Calculus.
hackerboss.com
Efficient Regex Matching Libraries | Hacker Boss
http://hackerboss.com/is-your-regex-matcher-up-to-snuff
Developing software and managing development teams. Is Your Regex Matcher Up to Snuff? Tuesday, March 16, 2010. Did you know that your regex matching library may suck? Most libraries do, in certain circumstances, suck exponentially. This came to me as a great suprise when, a long time ago in the olden days before Google, iPods, and salmon skin leather, I was researching regex matching engines hoping to find a good one for use in a real-time system. Time to match a? So when does this behavior matter?
schani.wordpress.com
How to Split a Pizza | Mostly Software
https://schani.wordpress.com/2013/04/27/how-to-split-a-pizza
How to Split a Pizza. Assume two people want to split a pizza in a fair way. In our context, fair means that if both people follow the procedure, each person gets half a pizza, or, if not, only has themselves to blame. The obvious answer seems to be “split it in the middle”, but that leads to all kinds of further questions and complications: Who does the splitting? How is “the middle” determined? What if there are three people? And B chooses the large piece, C doesn’t get their fair share (neither ...
palgorithm.co.uk
Why isn’t Haskell popular in Industry? | Friendly patterns and algorithms
http://www.palgorithm.co.uk/2010/05/why-isnt-haskell-popular-in-industry
Friendly patterns and algorithms. Why isn't Haskell popular in Industry? 30 May, 2010. This question was recently posed (and closed! The top voted reply is so good I thought I'd replicate it here! I'm afraid all I know of the original author is their "Orphi" posting name. It's tongue-in-cheek and broadly true, although I'd argue the details of a few points. I think it's interesting that it doesn't contain the main reason blocking me from using it on a daily basis. More on that in a moment. First, by #2, ...