Chris Jester-Young
Unix programmer, with current focus on Kotlin, Ruby, and Scheme, but also with lots of experience in C++, Java, and Perl. I learn new languages every year, always looking for the right tool for the tasks I'm up against.
My longer-term aim is to help everyone and myself level up the craft of coding, through the use of better tools and technologies. I'll update this space when I have more to announce!
Unix programmer, with current focus on Kotlin, Ruby, and Scheme, but also with lots of experience in C++, Java, and Perl. I learn new languages every year, always looking for the right tool for the tasks I'm up against.
My longer-term aim is to help everyone and myself level up the craft of coding, through the use of better tools and technologies. I'll update this space when I have more to announce!
A Discord bot that posts cat pictures from a designated channel on request, and provides other functionality to players in the Gems of War guild I run.
A Discord bot that posts cat pictures from a designated channel on request, and provides other functionality to players in the Gems of War guild I run.
A Minesweeper game with more emoji 😉
I originally created EmojiSweeper in JavaScript as a way to teach myself React. It used Immutable, which is a neat persistent data structures library for JS.
After implementing that, I discovered an awesome ClojureScript library called Reagent which allows me to use React with Clojure's persistent data structures. The use of re-frame enabled me to use Redux-style one-way data flows. These two libraries really are the sweet spot for implementing single-page apps!
A Minesweeper game with more emoji 😉
I originally created EmojiSweeper in JavaScript as a way to teach myself React. It used Immutable, which is a neat persistent data structures library for JS.
After implementing that, I discovered an awesome ClojureScript library called Reagent which allows me to use React with Clojure's persistent data structures. The use of re-frame enabled me to use Redux-style one-way data flows. These two libraries really are the sweet spot for implementing single-page apps!
A faster Java heap analyser
I'm the maintainer of fasthat. See this presentation for a brief introduction.
Fasthat started out as a project to improve the speed of jhat's OQL queries by using the compilation capabilities provided by the full Rhino (unlike the JDK-bundled Rhino that jhat uses).
Along the way, I've made many other enhancements, such as the ability to peek into data structures provided by other languages. (Currently, this only covers JRuby 1.2, 1.6, and 1.7, since those were the versions used at On-Site back when I worked there, but I implement other languages as needed.)
This repo is my private fork of the original fasthat that I worked on when I was at On-Site, that I continue to enhance.
A faster Java heap analyser
I'm the maintainer of fasthat. See this presentation for a brief introduction.
Fasthat started out as a project to improve the speed of jhat's OQL queries by using the compilation capabilities provided by the full Rhino (unlike the JDK-bundled Rhino that jhat uses).
Along the way, I've made many other enhancements, such as the ability to peek into data structures provided by other languages. (Currently, this only covers JRuby 1.2, 1.6, and 1.7, since those were the versions used at On-Site back when I worked there, but I implement other languages as needed.)
This repo is my private fork of the original fasthat that I worked on when I was at On-Site, that I continue to enhance.
Java wrapper for Sizzle
Frizzle is a Java wrapper to the Sizzle JS library. It allows Java DOM objects to be selected on via Sizzle selectors. See this presentation for more background.
I implemented the core of Frizzle; the most interesting bits are in the custom WrapFactory
that creates special objects to augment the Java DOM objects to speak the same language as that expected by Sizzle.
Java wrapper for Sizzle
Frizzle is a Java wrapper to the Sizzle JS library. It allows Java DOM objects to be selected on via Sizzle selectors. See this presentation for more background.
I implemented the core of Frizzle; the most interesting bits are in the custom WrapFactory
that creates special objects to augment the Java DOM objects to speak the same language as that expected by Sizzle.
A Racket→JVM FFI
I'm the author of Rackona. See this presentation for more details.
Rackona is a Racket library that uses the Racket FFI to bind to the JNI, so that Racket code can easily call existing Java libraries.
Later on, I will be implementing a high-level wrapper that allows using nice Racket syntax for calling Java methods directly, without having to mess with JNI internals.
A Racket→JVM FFI
I'm the author of Rackona. See this presentation for more details.
Rackona is a Racket library that uses the Racket FFI to bind to the JNI, so that Racket code can easily call existing Java libraries.
Later on, I will be implementing a high-level wrapper that allows using nice Racket syntax for calling Java methods directly, without having to mess with JNI internals.
Modules for Guile 2.0
Modules I've written to work with Guile 2.0. In particular, I've been (in my Copious Free Time) working towards porting SRFI 41 streams for use with Guile 2.0. (This has since been merged into mainline Guile as of 2.0.9.)
This project has some overlap in purpose with guile-lib, but the latter maintains compatibility with Guile 1.6, whereas the code I'm working with use 2.0-specific features (and they're well, well worth using). So I felt a separate project, dedicated to Guile 2.0 modules, would be more useful.
Modules for Guile 2.0
Modules I've written to work with Guile 2.0. In particular, I've been (in my Copious Free Time) working towards porting SRFI 41 streams for use with Guile 2.0. (This has since been merged into mainline Guile as of 2.0.9.)
This project has some overlap in purpose with guile-lib, but the latter maintains compatibility with Guile 1.6, whereas the code I'm working with use 2.0-specific features (and they're well, well worth using). So I felt a separate project, dedicated to Guile 2.0 modules, would be more useful.
A faster Java heap analysis tool
I was the maintainer of fasthat (I now have a private fork since I left On-Site, to continue my work). See this presentation for a brief introduction.
A faster Java heap analysis tool
I was the maintainer of fasthat (I now have a private fork since I left On-Site, to continue my work). See this presentation for a brief introduction.
Stack Overflow branch of WMD
I did the initial reverse-engineering of the WMD code. I only got about one-third of the way through, though, so don't use my version—use the Stack Overflow-maintained version instead!
Stack Overflow branch of WMD
I did the initial reverse-engineering of the WMD code. I only got about one-third of the way through, though, so don't use my version—use the Stack Overflow-maintained version instead!
I type with the Dvorak layout, and average about 100–120 wpm. Yes, even on my phone (though not at 100–120 wpm).
The first programming languages I played with were QuickBASIC, 8086 assembly, and C, in that order. Among the first interesting programs I wrote were:
- At age 11, a program that randomly paired students in my class, who would then sit together in class for that week. Unlike Bill Gates's class allocation program, mine did not cheat. :-P (Though, in hindsight, I sometimes wish it did; incidentally, one of my best friends in class went on to become a well-adored politician.)
- At age 13, a program that generated as many random arithmetic questions as you could handle in 3 minutes; you could tune the difficulty of the questions, and the program kept stats on how well you did. I wrote the program to help my sister with maths; she went on to become one of the top students in New Zealand. <3 (Okay, so the two are probably unrelated, but it sure sounds cool!)
In my Copious Free Timeâ„¢, I enjoy playing with:
- Dynamic languages (especially Scheme, Ruby, and JavaScript) and their implementation
- Assembly languages (x86, JVM, MMIX)
- Dynamic (JIT) compilation, code generation and optimisation, and decompilation
- Macros, macros, and more macros (of the Scheme variety, not cpp or m4)
Before 2007, I was known by my unmarried name, Chris K. Young. My username was just my initials, and I suppose you could say that real names change more readily than usernames. :-P
For people who like categorising programmers by personality type, I'm an INFP. Some geeks I know adamantly swear that all good programmers they know are T types; I live to prove otherwise.
I type with the Dvorak layout, and average about 100–120 wpm. Yes, even on my phone (though not at 100–120 wpm).
The first programming languages I played with were QuickBASIC, 8086 assembly, and C, in that order. Among the first interesting programs I wrote were:
- At age 11, a program that randomly paired students in my class, who would then sit together in class for that week. Unlike Bill Gates's class allocation program, mine did not cheat. :-P (Though, in hindsight, I sometimes wish it did; incidentally, one of my best friends in class went on to become a well-adored politician.)
- At age 13, a program that generated as many random arithmetic questions as you could handle in 3 minutes; you could tune the difficulty of the questions, and the program kept stats on how well you did. I wrote the program to help my sister with maths; she went on to become one of the top students in New Zealand. <3 (Okay, so the two are probably unrelated, but it sure sounds cool!)
In my Copious Free Timeâ„¢, I enjoy playing with:
- Dynamic languages (especially Scheme, Ruby, and JavaScript) and their implementation
- Assembly languages (x86, JVM, MMIX)
- Dynamic (JIT) compilation, code generation and optimisation, and decompilation
- Macros, macros, and more macros (of the Scheme variety, not cpp or m4)
Before 2007, I was known by my unmarried name, Chris K. Young. My username was just my initials, and I suppose you could say that real names change more readily than usernames. :-P
For people who like categorising programmers by personality type, I'm an INFP. Some geeks I know adamantly swear that all good programmers they know are T types; I live to prove otherwise.

Still working in Team On-Site after RealPage's acquisition, mostly in the screening products division.
- Implemented On-Site's side of the On-Site/Propertyware integration
- Working on various yet-to-be-released projects in the On-Site screening product
- Converting existing Java code to Kotlin during project work, in cases where such conversion would provide great value
Still working in Team On-Site after RealPage's acquisition, mostly in the screening products division.
- Implemented On-Site's side of the On-Site/Propertyware integration
- Working on various yet-to-be-released projects in the On-Site screening product
- Converting existing Java code to Kotlin during project work, in cases where such conversion would provide great value

Back at On-Site, I continue working on the backend to RentalExpress, On-Site's flagship product.
- Helped with migrating the platform to Java 8 and Tomcat 9
- Continued the refactoring work I was doing on our settings subsystem
Back at On-Site, I continue working on the backend to RentalExpress, On-Site's flagship product.
- Helped with migrating the platform to Java 8 and Tomcat 9
- Continued the refactoring work I was doing on our settings subsystem
I'm building a company to enable people to learn coding more effectively, via one-on-one tutoring. Let's do personalised learning like we mean it!
I'm building a company to enable people to learn coding more effectively, via one-on-one tutoring. Let's do personalised learning like we mean it!

On-Site.com is a web-based service that enables apartment managers to attract and screen tenants online.
- Created fasthat, a fork of jhat that adds features useful for analysing JRuby heap dumps.
- See Introducing fasthat for more details.
- Designed and implemented the encryption system used to protect consumer data.
- Implemented and maintained various integration systems for connecting to some of our partners.
- Re-engineered our core system to enable site data to be processed in bulk, for internal uses.
On-Site.com is a web-based service that enables apartment managers to attract and screen tenants online.
- Created fasthat, a fork of jhat that adds features useful for analysing JRuby heap dumps.
- See Introducing fasthat for more details.
- Designed and implemented the encryption system used to protect consumer data.
- Implemented and maintained various integration systems for connecting to some of our partners.
- Re-engineered our core system to enable site data to be processed in bulk, for internal uses.
Three-month contract to complete a number of high-priority projects in the hosting arm of the company:
- Planned, organised, and performed the migration of about 50 websites from their old hosting ISP to our servers, consolidating all our hosting resources.
- Trained our new Systems Engineer, and documented hosting-related aspects of our work.
- Wrote software to gather network usage statistics efficiently, to enable passing on our traffic charges to clients with high usage without compromising the performance of our high-demand firewall machine.
Three-month contract to complete a number of high-priority projects in the hosting arm of the company:
- Planned, organised, and performed the migration of about 50 websites from their old hosting ISP to our servers, consolidating all our hosting resources.
- Trained our new Systems Engineer, and documented hosting-related aspects of our work.
- Wrote software to gather network usage statistics efficiently, to enable passing on our traffic charges to clients with high usage without compromising the performance of our high-demand firewall machine.
Maintenance of a network of 500 computers (12 in each classroom), largely composed of thin clients connecting to Citrix, along with Windows, Linux, and Mac machines.
Murrays Bay Intermediate School was one of the inaugural schools in the North Shore Education and Access Loop (NEAL) project, which provides gigabit fibre-optic connectivity between North Shore schools.
- Advanced the use of server virtualisation since early 2006, when few school networks used it, greatly enhancing the functionality and reliability of our servers.
- Shaped NEAL's early technical direction, as an initial member of the NEAL technical committee.
- Created a hands-on beginners' programming course for our students, by writing Scriptlet Workshop, a web application that built user-entered code into scriptlets (Java applets coded in JavaScript).
- Automated the process of yearly student rollover, by writing a suite of Perl scripts that interfaced between our student management system, Active Directory, and other online applications used by students.
Maintenance of a network of 500 computers (12 in each classroom), largely composed of thin clients connecting to Citrix, along with Windows, Linux, and Mac machines.
Murrays Bay Intermediate School was one of the inaugural schools in the North Shore Education and Access Loop (NEAL) project, which provides gigabit fibre-optic connectivity between North Shore schools.
- Advanced the use of server virtualisation since early 2006, when few school networks used it, greatly enhancing the functionality and reliability of our servers.
- Shaped NEAL's early technical direction, as an initial member of the NEAL technical committee.
- Created a hands-on beginners' programming course for our students, by writing Scriptlet Workshop, a web application that built user-entered code into scriptlets (Java applets coded in JavaScript).
- Automated the process of yearly student rollover, by writing a suite of Perl scripts that interfaced between our student management system, Active Directory, and other online applications used by students.
C++ backend and frontend development role, with a Java web development component, involving the Q-MasterEX and Corus products (predecessors to Zeacom Communications Center).
- Refactored the reporting component to allow new report types to be added with much less code. Also, implemented said (over 30) new report types.
- Streamlined the web chat system (instant messaging to agents using Q-MasterEX queue management) by using XML between the web layer and the backend.
- Augmented the tools used in localising the Q-MasterEX and Corus frontend programs, to ease quality localisations of new releases (I was responsible for the Chinese localisation for two releases).
C++ backend and frontend development role, with a Java web development component, involving the Q-MasterEX and Corus products (predecessors to Zeacom Communications Center).
- Refactored the reporting component to allow new report types to be added with much less code. Also, implemented said (over 30) new report types.
- Streamlined the web chat system (instant messaging to agents using Q-MasterEX queue management) by using XML between the web layer and the backend.
- Augmented the tools used in localising the Q-MasterEX and Corus frontend programs, to ease quality localisations of new releases (I was responsible for the Chinese localisation for two releases).
- Implemented a new (at the time) serialisation format for R as my honours project, with Ross Ihaka's supervision.
- Implemented a new (at the time) serialisation format for R as my honours project, with Ross Ihaka's supervision.
Most of the tags listed above were self-taught, by the way; the university didn't have courses for those. (Except R, of course—which was created at said university's statistics department. :-D)
- Scored among top three teams in 5 of 6 programming contests (ACM ICPC and NZPC, for 3 years) with Bradley Grainger and Edward Sargisson.
Most of the tags listed above were self-taught, by the way; the university didn't have courses for those. (Except R, of course—which was created at said university's statistics department. :-D)
- Scored among top three teams in 5 of 6 programming contests (ACM ICPC and NZPC, for 3 years) with Bradley Grainger and Edward Sargisson.