Podcasts about transpilers

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Best podcasts about transpilers

Latest podcast episodes about transpilers

#StoriesByScrimba Podcast
What's New in React 19 (and What That Means for You), with Dev Agrawal

#StoriesByScrimba Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2024 40:19


Rustacean Station
C2Rust with Stephen Crane

Rustacean Station

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2022 55:31


Allen Wyma talks with Stephen Crane, CTO of Immunant, who is working on C2Rust, a library that transpiles C99-compliant C code into unsafe Rust. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you'd like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Timestamps [@00:00] - C2Rust Introduction [@01:50] - How C2Rust works and its goal as a transpiler [@05:49] - Transpilers vs compilers [@12:30] - Unstructured control flow vs structured control flow [@16:32] - The process of transforming C to Rust projects [@19:15] - Parsing C code correctly [@22:13] - The importance of compiler flags on interpreting C Code [@28:45] - C++ vs C [@38:50] - When you should you look at using C2Rust [@45:04] - The best way to run your tests in Rust [@48:15] - Projects that are currently using C2Rust [@50:29] - Improving the usability and safety of the output of rust code [@53:55] - Parting thoughts Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: Plangora Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Plangora Hosts: Allen Wyma

Polyglot
Transpilers and Teaching with Cameron Dutro

Polyglot

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2021 35:52 Transcription Available


Relicans host, Ali Diamond asks Quip Software Engineer, Cameron Dutro to explain Kubernetes and Docker to her like she's five, gets his take on computer science and engineering education, and has him explain how being a teacher has made him a better co-worker.Should you find a burning need to share your thoughts or rants about the show, please spray them at devrel@newrelic.com. While you're going to all the trouble of shipping us some bytes, please consider taking a moment to let us know what you'd like to hear on the show in the future. Despite the all-caps flaming you will receive in response, please know that we are sincerely interested in your feedback; we aim to appease. Follow us on the Twitters: @PolyglotShow.

Web Dev 101 - Front End, Back End, Full Stack
Compilers, Interpreters, Transpilers and the Java Virtual Machine (How Code is Run)

Web Dev 101 - Front End, Back End, Full Stack

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2021 13:29


devNursery.com

code interpreters virtual machines compilers java virtual machine transpilers
Coder Radio
342: Webs Assemble!

Coder Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2019 42:30


Apple wades into controversy after filing some Swift-related patents and we explore WebAssembly and its implications for the open web. Plus the latest on Mike's road to Rust, some great feedback, and more!

Cross Cutting Concerns Podcast
Podcast 063 - Ted Neward on Transpilers

Cross Cutting Concerns Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2017 27:14


Ted Neward is transpiling other languages to JavaScript. Show Notes: CFront, a C++ to C transpiler. I found an interview with Bjarne Stroustrup (archive.org link) that mentions CFront on its 30 year anniversary Emscripten / asm.js WebAssembly CoffeeScript / Ruby on Rails Microsoft and Google collaborate on Angular 2 Anders Hejlsberg Kotlin can transpile to JavaScript (check out Episode 057 with Michael Yotive on Kotlin) Fantom Dart NaCl (and PNaCl) for Chrome TypeScript Smartsheet (Smartsheet Developer Portal) Book: Compilers: Principles, Techniques, & Tools (aka "The Dragon Book") ANTLR Ted Neward is on Twitter. Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical. Theme music is "Crosscutting Concerns" by The Dirty Truckers, check out their music on Amazon or iTunes.

Front End Happy Hour
Episode 022 - Drinking with more style and less sass

Front End Happy Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2016 52:54


Writing CSS seems pretty straight forward until your project and team starts to grow. CSS has a lot of issues, in this episode we share some advice for making it a little bit easier. We’ll also discuss ways to create a scalable CSS architecture for large projects and teams. Items mentioned in the episode: Sarah Drasner, Chris Coyier, Una Kravets, Sass, Less, Transpilers episode, BEM, Sass-lint, BEM lint, React, Radium, Aphrodite, Webpack, Ruby, Ruby Sass, LibSass, PostCSS, CSS Houdini, SMACSS, SassySass, Wai Lun Poon, Dart, xkcd compiling, Stylus, Jade, TJ Holowaychuk, Express, Koa, Go, Autoprefixer, Flexbox Panelists: Ryan Burgess - @burgessdryan Augustus Yuan - @augburto Jem Young - @JemYoung Derrick Showers - @derrickshowers Brian Holt - @holtbt Mars Jullian - @marsjosephine Picks: Ryan Burgess - Art of Readme Ryan Burgess - Nas - Wrote My Way Out Augustus Yuan - Google Code-in Augustus Yuan - CSS Stats Jem Young - Sketch Jem Young - Complete Intro to React Derrick Showers - Code Pen Derrick Showers - Nextdoor Brian Holt - CSS Wizardry Brian Holt - mrmrs Brian Holt - Una Kravets Brian Holt - Sarah Drasner Brian Holt - Rachel Nabors Brian Holt - City of Minneapolis Brian Holt - Laphroaig Madeira Mars Jullian - cssreference.io Mars Jullian - The Great Dickens Fair

WeCodeSign Podcast
15 - Herramientas del Frontend

WeCodeSign Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2016 60:56


Descripcion del programa Hoy es un programa muy especial, por un lado porque por fin puedo presentar dos iniciativas que se están realizando en la Madrid, la primera es un Meetup,OpenSource Weekends que se realiza mensualmente un sábado al mes de 10:30h a 14:30h y la segunda es la apertura del Call for Papers de una conferencia que estamos organizando y que tendrá lugar en Campus Madrid el 18 de febrero de 2017 llamada FrontFest. Hoy como invitado traigo a una persona que conocí en un Meetup de los múltiples que se realizan en Madrid y que nos ayudará a entender el ecosistema de herramientas que usamos día a día y para que sirven. Hablaremos de task runners, de transpiladores y gestores de dependencias entre otros. ¡Como siempre esperamos que lo disfrutéis! Encuesta para pedir Feedback Posibles topics, entrevistados y duración del programa Eventos en Madrid OpenSource Weekends FrontFest Recomendaciones Preguntas rápidas: Luis de Dios Quién me ha inspirado: Linus Torvalds Recomiéndanos un recurso: Sitepoint Recomiéndanos un recurso: Genbeta Dev Recomiéndanos a un invitado: Ilya Grigorik ¿Qué tema te gustaría que tratásemos?: Otros lenguajes de programación para el Frontend ¿Qué tema te gustaría que tratásemos?: Web Asambly Contacta con: Luis de Dios Twitter Github Links del programa How JavaScript package managers work Yarn a new package manager JS frontend pagckage managers Package managers comparison Yarn benchmarks Charla de automatización en el frontend ECMAScript 2016 compatibility table Bower NPM Yarn JSPM Broccoli Gulp Grunt Babel Webpack Codekit WebAssembly elm Clojurescript Scala Recomendaciones de Nacho Repositorio de ejemplo de Grunt/Gulp Crea tu workflow front-end con Gulp.js Contacta con el programa Web de WeCodeSign Twitter de WeCodeSign eMail de WeCodeSign Web de Ignacio Villanueva Twitter de Ignacio Villanueva

Front End Happy Hour
Episode 011 - Transpilers - slow down and drink

Front End Happy Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2016 45:55


Leveraging transpilers is extremely helpful in allowing us to extend the JavaScript language in ways JavaScript engines cannot. There are a lot of amazing transpilers available in the JavaScript community and we all love transpilers, but there are things developers should be aware of when we’re using transpilers. Items mentioned in the episode: Babel, CoffeeScript, TypeScript, Traceur, Sass, Less, Stylus, Chrome V8, Firefox SpiderMonkey, IE Chakra, TC39 Committee, React CLI, ClojureScript, Ohm, CodePen, Racket, Erlang Panelists: Ryan Burgess - @burgessdryan Augustus Yuan - @augburto Jem Young - @JemYoung Derrick Showers - @derrickshowers Ryan Anklam - @bittersweetryan Brian Holt - @holtbt Sarah Federman - @sarah_federman Picks: Ryan Burgess - Stranger Things Ryan Burgess - Jem Young - Transpilers: not so fast my friend - Empire JS Augustus Yuan - Github Go to Definition Chrome Extension Augustus Yuan - StackOverflow’s Documentation Beta Jem Young - Explosions in the Sky - The Wilderness Jem Young - Digital Ocean Derrick Showers - Babel Try It Out Derrick Showers - Google Inbox Ryan Anklam - Google Keep Ryan Anklam - Wafia - Heartburn Felix Cartel Remix Brian Holt - HyperTerm Brian Holt - Visual Studio Code Sarah Federman - Elle - Women in Tech 2016 Sarah Federman - Less: The World’s Most Misunderstood CSS Pre-processor*

Devchat.tv Master Feed
196 JSJ Tabris.js with Jochen Krause and Ian Bull

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2016 68:13


Check out Freelance Remote Conf and React Remote Conf!   02:31 - Jochen Krause Introduction Twitter EclipseSource 03:21 - Ian Bull Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:01 - Tabris.js tabris-js (GitHub) 04:48 - Tabris vs React, Cordova, and React Native Exposing Bluetooth Functionality 08:25 - Benefits/Advantages of Using Tabris j2v8 12:45 - Creating Panels and Flows 14:26 - Getting Started Experience 16:40 - Handling Updates; Live Updating The Tabris.js Developer App Will Apple eventually ever have to give in? 25:15 - Views (Declarative and Imperative UI) Ext JS 29:09 - "Write once, run anywhere." vs "Learn once write anywhere." 35:21 - Why have other projects failed or not failed? Xamarin 39:41 - What does it mean to be statically compiled? 40:44 - Styling: Creating a Middle Group that Looks and Feels Good (iOS vs Android) Cross-platform Logic and Ecosystems 47:51 - ES6 Implications 49:29 - Plugins CocoaPods and Widgets' Picks Star Wars Essentials (AJ) Star Wars: The Force Awakens (AJ) Thing Explainer: Complicated Stuff in Simple Words by Randall Munroe (AJ) James Edwards: Making a Mini-Lisp: Introduction to Transpilers (Aimee) Nick Saban (Aimee) Lloyd Borrett: Bill Gates and Petals Around the Rose (Jamison) Dan Luu: Normalization of Deviance in Software: How Completely Broken Practices Become Normal (Jamison) Craig Stuntz: Programs that Write Programs: How Compilers Work (Jamison) Microsoft (Dave) Tina Fey (Dave) thoughtram Blog (Dave) Pascal Precht (Dave) CES (Chuck) The Modern Team (Ian) Eric Elliott (Ian) Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman (Jochen)

JavaScript Jabber
196 JSJ Tabris.js with Jochen Krause and Ian Bull

JavaScript Jabber

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2016 68:13


Check out Freelance Remote Conf and React Remote Conf!   02:31 - Jochen Krause Introduction Twitter EclipseSource 03:21 - Ian Bull Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:01 - Tabris.js tabris-js (GitHub) 04:48 - Tabris vs React, Cordova, and React Native Exposing Bluetooth Functionality 08:25 - Benefits/Advantages of Using Tabris j2v8 12:45 - Creating Panels and Flows 14:26 - Getting Started Experience 16:40 - Handling Updates; Live Updating The Tabris.js Developer App Will Apple eventually ever have to give in? 25:15 - Views (Declarative and Imperative UI) Ext JS 29:09 - "Write once, run anywhere." vs "Learn once write anywhere." 35:21 - Why have other projects failed or not failed? Xamarin 39:41 - What does it mean to be statically compiled? 40:44 - Styling: Creating a Middle Group that Looks and Feels Good (iOS vs Android) Cross-platform Logic and Ecosystems 47:51 - ES6 Implications 49:29 - Plugins CocoaPods and Widgets' Picks Star Wars Essentials (AJ) Star Wars: The Force Awakens (AJ) Thing Explainer: Complicated Stuff in Simple Words by Randall Munroe (AJ) James Edwards: Making a Mini-Lisp: Introduction to Transpilers (Aimee) Nick Saban (Aimee) Lloyd Borrett: Bill Gates and Petals Around the Rose (Jamison) Dan Luu: Normalization of Deviance in Software: How Completely Broken Practices Become Normal (Jamison) Craig Stuntz: Programs that Write Programs: How Compilers Work (Jamison) Microsoft (Dave) Tina Fey (Dave) thoughtram Blog (Dave) Pascal Precht (Dave) CES (Chuck) The Modern Team (Ian) Eric Elliott (Ian) Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman (Jochen)

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv
196 JSJ Tabris.js with Jochen Krause and Ian Bull

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2016 68:13


Check out Freelance Remote Conf and React Remote Conf!   02:31 - Jochen Krause Introduction Twitter EclipseSource 03:21 - Ian Bull Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:01 - Tabris.js tabris-js (GitHub) 04:48 - Tabris vs React, Cordova, and React Native Exposing Bluetooth Functionality 08:25 - Benefits/Advantages of Using Tabris j2v8 12:45 - Creating Panels and Flows 14:26 - Getting Started Experience 16:40 - Handling Updates; Live Updating The Tabris.js Developer App Will Apple eventually ever have to give in? 25:15 - Views (Declarative and Imperative UI) Ext JS 29:09 - "Write once, run anywhere." vs "Learn once write anywhere." 35:21 - Why have other projects failed or not failed? Xamarin 39:41 - What does it mean to be statically compiled? 40:44 - Styling: Creating a Middle Group that Looks and Feels Good (iOS vs Android) Cross-platform Logic and Ecosystems 47:51 - ES6 Implications 49:29 - Plugins CocoaPods and Widgets' Picks Star Wars Essentials (AJ) Star Wars: The Force Awakens (AJ) Thing Explainer: Complicated Stuff in Simple Words by Randall Munroe (AJ) James Edwards: Making a Mini-Lisp: Introduction to Transpilers (Aimee) Nick Saban (Aimee) Lloyd Borrett: Bill Gates and Petals Around the Rose (Jamison) Dan Luu: Normalization of Deviance in Software: How Completely Broken Practices Become Normal (Jamison) Craig Stuntz: Programs that Write Programs: How Compilers Work (Jamison) Microsoft (Dave) Tina Fey (Dave) thoughtram Blog (Dave) Pascal Precht (Dave) CES (Chuck) The Modern Team (Ian) Eric Elliott (Ian) Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman (Jochen)

Devchat.tv Master Feed
168 JSJ The Future of JavaScript with Jafar Husain

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2015 77:23


03:04 - Jafar Husain Introduction Twitter GitHub Netflix TC39 03:29 - The Great Name Debate (ES6, ES7 = ES2015, ES2016!!) 05:35 - The Release Cycle What This Means for Browsers 08:37 - Babel and ECMAScript 09:50 - WebAssembly 13:01 - Google’s NACL 13:23 - Performance > Features? ES6 Feature Performance (JavaScript Weekly Article) Features Implemented as Polyfills (Why Bother?) 20:12 - TC39 24:22 - New Features Decorators Performance Benefit? 28:53 -Transpilers 34:48 - Object.observe() 37:51 - Immutable Types 45:32 - Structural Types 47:11 - Symbols 48:58 - Observables 52:31 - Async Functions asyncawait 57:31 - Rapid Fire Round - When New Feature Will Be Released in ES2015 or ES2016 let - 15 for...of - 15 modules - 15 destructuring - 15 promises - 15 default function argument expressions - 15 asyncawait - 16 Picks ES6 and ES7 on The Web Platform Podcast (AJ) Binding to the Cloud with Falcor Jafar Husain (AJ) Asynchronous JavaScript at Netflix by Jafar Husain @ MountainWest Ruby 2014 (AJ) Let's Encrypt on Raspberry Pi (AJ) adventures in haproxy: tcp, tls, https, ssh, openvpn (AJ) Let's Encrypt through HAProxy (AJ) Mandy's Fiancé's Video Game Fund (AJ) The Murray Gell-Mann Amnesia Effect (Dave) The Majority Illusion (Dave) [Egghead.io] Asynchronous Programming: The End of The Loop (Aimee) Study: You Really Can 'Work Smarter, Not Harder' (Aimee) Elm (Jamison) The Katering Show (Jamison) Sharding Tweet (Jamison) The U.S. Women's National Soccer Team (Joe) mdn.io (Joe) Aftershokz AS500 Bluez 2 Open Ear Wireless Stereo Headphones (Chuck) Autonomy, Mastery, Purpose: The Science of What Motivates Us, Animated (Jafar) Netflix (Jafar) quiescent (Jafar) Clojurescript (Jafar)

JavaScript Jabber
168 JSJ The Future of JavaScript with Jafar Husain

JavaScript Jabber

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2015 77:23


03:04 - Jafar Husain Introduction Twitter GitHub Netflix TC39 03:29 - The Great Name Debate (ES6, ES7 = ES2015, ES2016!!) 05:35 - The Release Cycle What This Means for Browsers 08:37 - Babel and ECMAScript 09:50 - WebAssembly 13:01 - Google’s NACL 13:23 - Performance > Features? ES6 Feature Performance (JavaScript Weekly Article) Features Implemented as Polyfills (Why Bother?) 20:12 - TC39 24:22 - New Features Decorators Performance Benefit? 28:53 -Transpilers 34:48 - Object.observe() 37:51 - Immutable Types 45:32 - Structural Types 47:11 - Symbols 48:58 - Observables 52:31 - Async Functions asyncawait 57:31 - Rapid Fire Round - When New Feature Will Be Released in ES2015 or ES2016 let - 15 for...of - 15 modules - 15 destructuring - 15 promises - 15 default function argument expressions - 15 asyncawait - 16 Picks ES6 and ES7 on The Web Platform Podcast (AJ) Binding to the Cloud with Falcor Jafar Husain (AJ) Asynchronous JavaScript at Netflix by Jafar Husain @ MountainWest Ruby 2014 (AJ) Let's Encrypt on Raspberry Pi (AJ) adventures in haproxy: tcp, tls, https, ssh, openvpn (AJ) Let's Encrypt through HAProxy (AJ) Mandy's Fiancé's Video Game Fund (AJ) The Murray Gell-Mann Amnesia Effect (Dave) The Majority Illusion (Dave) [Egghead.io] Asynchronous Programming: The End of The Loop (Aimee) Study: You Really Can 'Work Smarter, Not Harder' (Aimee) Elm (Jamison) The Katering Show (Jamison) Sharding Tweet (Jamison) The U.S. Women's National Soccer Team (Joe) mdn.io (Joe) Aftershokz AS500 Bluez 2 Open Ear Wireless Stereo Headphones (Chuck) Autonomy, Mastery, Purpose: The Science of What Motivates Us, Animated (Jafar) Netflix (Jafar) quiescent (Jafar) Clojurescript (Jafar)

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv
168 JSJ The Future of JavaScript with Jafar Husain

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2015 77:23


03:04 - Jafar Husain Introduction Twitter GitHub Netflix TC39 03:29 - The Great Name Debate (ES6, ES7 = ES2015, ES2016!!) 05:35 - The Release Cycle What This Means for Browsers 08:37 - Babel and ECMAScript 09:50 - WebAssembly 13:01 - Google’s NACL 13:23 - Performance > Features? ES6 Feature Performance (JavaScript Weekly Article) Features Implemented as Polyfills (Why Bother?) 20:12 - TC39 24:22 - New Features Decorators Performance Benefit? 28:53 -Transpilers 34:48 - Object.observe() 37:51 - Immutable Types 45:32 - Structural Types 47:11 - Symbols 48:58 - Observables 52:31 - Async Functions asyncawait 57:31 - Rapid Fire Round - When New Feature Will Be Released in ES2015 or ES2016 let - 15 for...of - 15 modules - 15 destructuring - 15 promises - 15 default function argument expressions - 15 asyncawait - 16 Picks ES6 and ES7 on The Web Platform Podcast (AJ) Binding to the Cloud with Falcor Jafar Husain (AJ) Asynchronous JavaScript at Netflix by Jafar Husain @ MountainWest Ruby 2014 (AJ) Let's Encrypt on Raspberry Pi (AJ) adventures in haproxy: tcp, tls, https, ssh, openvpn (AJ) Let's Encrypt through HAProxy (AJ) Mandy's Fiancé's Video Game Fund (AJ) The Murray Gell-Mann Amnesia Effect (Dave) The Majority Illusion (Dave) [Egghead.io] Asynchronous Programming: The End of The Loop (Aimee) Study: You Really Can 'Work Smarter, Not Harder' (Aimee) Elm (Jamison) The Katering Show (Jamison) Sharding Tweet (Jamison) The U.S. Women's National Soccer Team (Joe) mdn.io (Joe) Aftershokz AS500 Bluez 2 Open Ear Wireless Stereo Headphones (Chuck) Autonomy, Mastery, Purpose: The Science of What Motivates Us, Animated (Jafar) Netflix (Jafar) quiescent (Jafar) Clojurescript (Jafar)