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CEOs: How to Not Screw Up Your AI Memo

https://www.callercallsback.com/p/ceos-heres-how-to-not-screw-up-your
1•ohjeez•2m ago•0 comments

Transgenic hookworm secretes anti-tetrodotoxin human single chain antibody

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-026-73447-9
2•phront•5m ago•0 comments

Netflix Viewing Activity

https://www.netflix.com/login?nextpage=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.netflix.com%2Fviewingactivity
1•meken•6m ago•0 comments

Setting Up a New Windows Laptop in 2026

https://matthewquerzoli.com/blog/18-06-2026-setting-up-a-new-windows-laptop-in-2026
1•Quiza12•7m ago•1 comments

Zero-Touch OAuth for MCP

https://blog.modelcontextprotocol.io/posts/enterprise-managed-auth/
1•niyikiza•9m ago•0 comments

The software industry: annealing, but wrong

https://apenwarr.ca/log/20260531
1•sebg•10m ago•0 comments

SubQ – a sub-quadratic LLM built for multi-million token reasoning

https://subq.ai/
1•modinfo•10m ago•0 comments

Shape Suffixes – Good Coding Style

https://medium.com/@NoamShazeer/shape-suffixes-good-coding-style-f836e72e24fd
1•sebg•14m ago•0 comments

How will AI make moral decisions for you and me?

https://knowablemagazine.org/content/article/technology/2026/what-shapes-ai-moral-decisions
1•knowablemag•17m ago•0 comments

The ancient book of wisdom at the heart of every computer (2014)

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/mar/21/ancient-book-wisdom-i-ching-computer-binary-code
1•mot2ba•17m ago•0 comments

Documenting Architecture Decisions (2011)

https://www.cognitect.com/blog/2011/11/15/documenting-architecture-decisions
1•ramoz•18m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: Are companies still hiring data scientists?

1•ivaivanova•18m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Sycloop – An AI marketplace that closes multi-party barter loops

https://sycloop.com
1•HELENENDORFSKY•19m ago•0 comments

How Tool Search Works and How It Saves Tokens

https://chaliy.name/blog/how-tool-search-works/
1•chalyi•20m ago•0 comments

AI to Automate Brain Diagnoses

https://radiologyai.com/
2•DarkContinent•21m ago•0 comments

Peter Thiel is actively convincing billionaires to abandon the Giving Pledge

https://fortune.com/2026/03/16/peter-thiel-giving-pledge-billionaire-philanthropy-backlash/
3•mgh2•21m ago•0 comments

Who's Actually Running That Robot?

https://www.bostonglobe.com/2026/06/18/opinion/demo-videos-robots-autonomous/
1•johncoatesdev•24m ago•0 comments

A beautiful and parametric particles simulation

https://sand-morph.up.railway.app/flux-lab
1•echohive42•24m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Pagecord Spotlight – discover trending independent posts on Pagecord

https://pagecord.com/spotlight
2•lylo•26m ago•1 comments

SE Radio 725: Danny Yang and Sam Goldman on the Pyrefly Type Checker

https://se-radio.net/2026/06/se-radio-725-danny-yang-and-sam-goldman-on-the-pyrefly-type-checker/
1•matt_d•28m ago•0 comments

Fencing Tournament Management is Brought to 2026

https://parrypost.dev/
1•mpelli•30m ago•0 comments

Lettera, a native, refined Markdown editor for macOS

https://lettera.md/
1•FinnLobsien•32m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a free API cost calculator after a $340 surprise invoice

https://apicalculators.com/
1•chnbydigi•37m ago•0 comments

Preschoolers search semantic networks in broader more variable ways than adults

https://osf.io/preprints/psyarxiv/qpj6n_v2
2•sebg•37m ago•0 comments

Drug-Free Immunotherapeutic Biomimetic Nanoparticles for Treating Breast Cancer

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsnano.5c18774
1•wslh•38m ago•0 comments

The Lorem Ipsum Mystery [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kL1PDqzqhM4
1•latexr•41m ago•0 comments

I Bought a 2004 iPod in 2026

https://chrissy.dev/notes/i-bought-a-2004-ipod-in-2026/
1•stog•41m ago•1 comments

The world may not like Trump's Gaza plan – but there is no alternative

https://www.ft.com/content/2472e584-758b-4a3f-83d1-9fba042a9312
1•JumpCrisscross•42m ago•0 comments

Using Code Maps

https://github.com/SymbolGroundingFramework/SGF-manifest/tree/main/wml-spec
2•jstakelum•44m ago•2 comments

Electric schnoz can smell when your food's gone bad

https://news.berkeley.edu/2026/06/17/the-nose-knows-electric-schnoz-can-smell-when-your-foods-gon...
3•gmays•45m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

LSP client in Clojure in 200 lines of code

https://vlaaad.github.io/lsp-client-in-200-lines-of-code
164•vlaaad•1y ago

Comments

whalesalad•1y ago
This is the most Java-y Clojure I’ve probably ever read. Just use Java? It’s so verbose and complex for what it is doing. Breaking this down into smaller functions and using core.async would make it even more succinct.

Just want to emphasize this because clojure is indeed a small, lesser known language that has a hard enough time attracting users. This is not what anyone would consider an idiomatic example of using clojure.

roenxi•1y ago
Would it be 200 lines of Java? It'd be 200 lines of just for the boilerplate. It isn't really a selling point of Clojure because it is subjective, but low-syntax high-terseness look of the code is in itself a reward for using the language.

And there isn't anything especially wrong with sticking to Java primitives if someone is comfortable with them. They work fine for Java programmers. The dude doesn't need to learn a new async library to write an LSP client if he doesn't feel like it. Code works, its easy to read, easy to understand and modify.

koito17•1y ago
Line count is not very useful to compare without the context of standard library size, third-party dependencies, etc. The code in TFA depends[1] on a JSON library[2] that is about a thousand lines of code (excluding tests) wrapping a Java library for JSON decoding.

Then there's other things to consider, like the fact that this LSP client, while succinct, pays not only the cost of loading Jackson, but also the cost of loading clojure.core, which is quite non-trivial[3]. Startup time for LSP servers and clients definitely matters to some, considering that e.g. even clojure-lsp recommends running native executables over JAR files[4]. Can't find documentation proving it's for quick startup, but it's a plausible rationale for their recommendation of a binary over a JAR.

Note: I have used Clojure professionally and in hobby projects. I think it's nice that one can interactively develop a minimal LSP client and the resulting amount of work is roughly 200 lines of code. I say "minimal" because it's unclear how this client deals with offsets reported by LSP servers, which are all given as offsets in a UTF-16 encoded string. In any case, I still think advertising "LSP client in 200 lines of code" hides valuable information regarding functionality, implementation, "actual" code size, and trade-offs made in the choice of technology stack.

[1] https://github.com/vlaaad/lsp-clj-client/blob/a567e66/deps.e...

[2] https://github.com/metosin/jsonista/blob/c8f2b62/project.clj...

[3] https://clojure-goes-fast.com/blog/clojures-slow-start/#cloj...

[4] https://clojure-lsp.io/installation/#embedded-jar-legacy-exe...

pron•1y ago
Between records and compact classes [1] Java's boilerplate isn't what it once was.

[1]: https://openjdk.org/jeps/512

newlisp•1y ago
It's idiomatic "low-level" Clojure, though. Not everything is a happy place where you're just manipulating maps and vectors like in most examples.
0x1ceb00da•1y ago
> lesser known language that has a hard enough time attracting users

For very good reasons.

dig1•1y ago
I don't see why this wouldn't be considered idiomatic clojure code; it makes proper use of all the facilities provided by the language and the main intention of this code is to follow the article. Additionally, the clojure core team often encourages not to shy away from using java code directly, as this approach strikes a good balance between performance and language expressivity.

> It’s so verbose and complex for what it is doing. ... and using core.async

I think this code is actually quite straightforward and easy for a clojure developer to understand. In fact, using core.async in this case would be overkill and could complicate things further.

daveliepmann•1y ago
This looks like the other completely normal, idiomatic Clojure programs I've seen which manipulate a StringBuilder. And as Clojurians go I'm far to the succinctness/concision-preferring end of the spectrum.

I'm curious to see your core.async-based version :)

askonomm•1y ago
Holy crap is this unreadable or what (notably the lsp-base fn). There's a reason why in most Clojure companies I've worked at we try to make as small functions as possible, because otherwise it very very quickly becomes an unreadable mess, and you write code after all for humans to read, because if you didn't, you might as well just write binary. But, I'm not surprised many people don't want to get into Clojure or Lisps in general, because it takes a boatload of conventions and active discipline to make it a good experience.
slifin•1y ago
To me something unreadable is code that I cannot statically make any assertions about the runtime behaviour of the code

This function you're complaining about looks like 2 virtual threads doing program input reading and output writing for the LSP client given some ArrayBlockingQueues in about 25-30 lines

If I wanted the complete story I could use Clojure's inbuilt test runner to slip some ArrayBlockingQueues in there and run it under record with Flowstorm

Then leisurely seek through the entire state of the program, to get the play-by-play of how this works

There are so many good design choices in this language and a good 30% of colleagues I run into are not even doing the basics of like running a REPL, I think some people just need to clock in with a decade of C# or PHP or TS or JS or Python or whatever to get a taste of a language with next to no inbuilt immutability, statements instead of expressions, no reload-ability in the language semantics and just crapshot debuggers that run in lockstep with the program execution