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Deleep, Avaneesh / gem5_new
BSD 3-Clause "New" or "Revised" LicenseUpdatedUpdated -
Deleep, Avaneesh / gem5
BSD 3-Clause "New" or "Revised" LicenseUpdatedUpdated -
On the tradeoffs between explainability and robustness in deep neural networks
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Chen, Leran / jmt-leran
GNU General Public License v2.0 or laterUpdated -
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Implements the long awaited client-side of datadec: given datadec types like "expr = num(int n) or ...", let us write:
%when expr e is num(n) { return n; }Updated -
An attempt to graft some form of C++-style namespaces into C ("C with namespaces: aka C+N") via another simple-minded pre-processor/translator that could be built in a matter of hours.
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In LinkedIn's Plain Old C Programming group in , John Coloccia asked about whether "namespaces" would be a good idea for C. He explained that he meant some form of modularity, and I thought I've have a play - this is the result! A module generator!
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Backend of a shopping list example: a RESTful API, written as a Perl CGI script, reimplementing jhc02's Django-based RESTful API. Wanted to see what it's like without N levels of Clarkian magic getting in the way.
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This project contains a daemon (command-listener) which runs a specific hard wired command with additional arguments passed to it from a client passing the stdout of that command back to the client, and a suitable command-client to send it.
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This project contains a daemon (command-listener) which runs a specific hard wired command with additional arguments passed to it from a client passing the stdout of that command back to the client, and a suitable command-client to send it.
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A cutdown version of part2 of my mailing list flattening C example, a specialised form of the general "computing transitive closures of a directed graph" method
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Written in C, this is a tiny compiler for a miniscule Haskell subset (essentially, Int -> Int functions) to Dafny translator. So many C tools (Yacc, Lex, my datadec, generic modules etc) used, only about 20% of the code is human-written.
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