Likes: | c unix lua compilers parsers |
Dislikes: | java jvm xml windows complexity |
Departmental honors in both Computer Science and Music, Cum Laude.
A size profiler for binaries.
Creator & Primary Developer
A small, low-level protocol buffer library
Creator & Primary Developer
A system for creating fast, reusable parsers
Creator & Sole Developer
A fast multi-track audio editor and recorder for Linux, BSD, Mac OS, and Windows. Supports WAV, AIFF, Ogg, and MP3 formats. Features include envelope editing, mixing, built-in effects and plug-ins, all with unlimited undo.
I was developer #3 on what has become a very popular open-source project. I spent my college years (2000-2004) contributing primarily to the audio I/O system and import/export plugin framework.
This article is aimed at the general population of programmers. I’m focusing on simple and practical results that you can use to build your intuition for how to think about floating-point numbers.
The way LL and LR are traditionally described was never super-intuitive to me. Here I describe these formalisms in a way that makes a lot more sense to me.
A "Hello, World" sized example of writing a JIT compiler. In this article I implement a very simple JIT for Brainf*ck.
There are a million parsing algorithms out there. It's easy to get lost, especially with the vague and inconsistent terminology you often see. This book is like a map that guides you through this world and makes many mysteries clear.
The kernel is just a library that runs at higher privilege than user programs. So many things about systems programming were demystified once I understood this. Also many peculiarities of POSIX like signals became clear once I saw their implementation.
We discuss the main novelties of the implementation of Lua 5.0: its register-based virtual machine, the new algorithm for optimizing tables used as arrays, the implementation of closures, and the addition of coroutines.
First Computer: | PreComputer 2000 with a BASIC interpreter |
Favorite Editor: | Vim, but hoping to someday create (or help create) something better |