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Москвичи пожаловались на зловонную квартиру-свалку с телами животных и тараканами18:04

She found them easier to watch than the lengthy TV shows which would keep her up all night.

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Getting Rusty At Coding#If you’ve spent enough time on programming forums such as Hacker News, you’ve probably seen the name “Rust”, often in the context of snark. Rust is a relatively niche compiled programming language that touts two important features: speed, which is evident in framework benchmarks where it can perform 10x as fast as the fastest Python library, and memory safety enforced at compile time through its ownership and borrowing systems which mitigates many potential problems. For over a decade, the slogan “Rewrite it in Rust” became a meme where advocates argued that everything should be rewritten in Rust due to its benefits, including extremely mature software that’s infeasible to actually rewrite in a different language. Even the major LLM companies are looking to Rust to eke out as much performance as possible: OpenAI President Greg Brockman recently tweeted “rust is a perfect language for agents, given that if it compiles it’s ~correct” which — albeit that statement is silly at a technical level since code can still be logically incorrect — shows that OpenAI is very interested in Rust, and if they’re interested in writing Rust code, they need their LLMs to be able to code well in Rust.

At some point I realized I could run tests forever. And I had already done that last year, and wrote it up in blog posts (one and two). Doing it again here didn’t seem especially valuable. So I pivoted to a “how to” page. In redesign 3 I decided to show the concepts, then a JavaScript implementation using CPU rendering, and then another implementation using GPU rendering. I made new versions of the diagrams:

Chapeau

// 逻辑:count(矮个子数) + (栈非空则+1,代表能看到第一个更高的人;否则+0)