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Developer of OCamlot. OCaml Hacker, Emacs Developer, PL Researcher.
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Nature

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Saw Monke.

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Going on a hike today! (toMacRitchie park)

The future is now old man!

https://gist.github.com/Gopiandcode/165f3cbfec3e7616be11378cb2111bc1

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Milo tower. Tasty.

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Of all the laptops I've had, my x220 is the only one that holds a special place in my heart. I've had mine for over 8 years, and it's still chugging on! What an amazing piece of kit. It seems they just don't make things like that anymore.

...but I guess it will probably be a several years before they'll be in the hands of programmers in even niche programming languages like OCaml, and decades more before they show up in more mainstream ones.[1]

[1] That is, unless effect-based languages like Koka suddenly have a massive rise in popularity.

Ok, wow, consider me impressed. Been using llama.cpp with a quantized model to try and generate code.

The code it generates is generally incomprehensible, but the functions and broad patterns it suggests are generally actually pretty useful.

(Here the code snippet for loop is missing a do, but this was good enough to get me going --- I haven't written elisp in a while, and I had forgotten the idioms myself).

And it generates this soo quickly. What I'd typically do with a web-query, I think I can probably now outsource to just a local one.

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Oh, yep, have to fix that as well. I actually had made a logo several eons ago (need to update the colour scheme).

Fun fact: for the longest time, any media, such as the logo, that I added to the source-repository kept on being corrupted whenever I tried to push my changes online. As it turns out, the reason for this was because I had started the project 2 years ago using the Sihl OCaml web-framework, which adds a .gitattributes file that causes git to treat every file as text (and thus replace carrige returns from windows to linux style). Aaarhg.

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