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Yes, Learning to Code Is Still Valuable

https://adventures.nodeland.dev/archive/yes-learning-to-code-is-still-valuable/
1•Tijana329•5m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Are We Friends in X?

https://arewefriends.sawirstudio.com/
1•sawirricardo•8m ago•0 comments

Ejaculating more frequently may improve sperm quality

https://theconversation.com/ejaculating-more-frequently-may-improve-sperm-quality-new-study-275373
1•0xedb•11m ago•1 comments

Against Time-Series Foundation Models

https://shakoist.substack.com/p/against-time-series-foundation-models
1•sebg•12m ago•0 comments

MetaImGui

https://github.com/andynicholson/MetaImGUI
1•andynicholson•19m ago•0 comments

OpenAI Is Doing Everything Poorly

https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/2026/03/sora-openai-identity-crisis/686544/
2•JumpCrisscross•22m ago•0 comments

A Phone-Free Childhood? One Irish Village Is Making It Happen

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/25/realestate/ireland-cell-phones-children.html
2•JumpCrisscross•22m ago•0 comments

IPhey: Fingerprinting and IP Checker

https://momoproxy.com/blog/iphey
1•udpchannel•23m ago•0 comments

2023 Or, Why I am Not a Doomer

https://www.hyperdimensional.co/p/2023
1•sebg•25m ago•0 comments

Treat Errors as Warnings

https://thejoylab.ai/p/ewarning
1•xerxes249•26m ago•0 comments

In Math, Rigor Is Vital. But Are Digitized Proofs Taking It Too Far?

https://www.quantamagazine.org/in-math-rigor-is-vital-but-are-digitized-proofs-taking-it-too-far-...
1•isaacfrond•26m ago•0 comments

LetPlant GreenFocus Pomodoro Timer

https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/letplant-greenfocus-pomod/faafihopigjlmphlldphfgdgagioejmk
1•doener•26m ago•0 comments

Supreme Court rejects Sony's attempt to kick music pirates off the Internet

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2026/03/supreme-court-rejects-sonys-attempt-to-kick-music-pir...
7•isaacfrond•27m ago•0 comments

We cache too much

https://websmith.studio/blog/we-cache-too-much/
1•titanslayer•27m ago•0 comments

Mazda may have found the apex in ICE design with the Skyactiv-Z

https://newatlas.com/automotive/mazda-skyactiv-z/
5•breve•29m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Imrobot – Reverse CAPTCHA that verifies AI agents, not humans

https://github.com/leopechnicki/im_robot
1•leo_pechnicki•29m ago•0 comments

Ireland's first mobile video call via satellite is made

https://www.rte.ie/news/business/2026/0326/1565222-satellite-call-ireland/
2•austinallegro•29m ago•0 comments

Why Sora Failed: $15M/day inference cost vs. $2.1M lifetime revenue

https://www.revolutioninai.com/2026/03/%20chatgpt-gpt-54-mini-silent-switch-march-2026.html
23•vinodpandey7•30m ago•9 comments

Running Sonnet 4.5 Level LLM's on Your Own Servers: Kimi K2.5 Economics

https://twitter.com/CDerinbogaz/status/2037101565249487079
1•textcortex•30m ago•0 comments

MSA on memory issues with AI-a [pdf]

https://github.com/EverMind-AI/MSA/blob/main/paper/MSA__Memory_Sparse_Attention_for_Efficient_End...
1•Liriel•32m ago•0 comments

Vim_gym – Practice Vim by competing against other people

https://www.vimgym.app/
1•Aaronmacaron•32m ago•1 comments

Why pylock.toml includes digital attestations

https://snarky.ca/why-pylock-toml-includes-digital-attestations/
1•lumpa•33m ago•0 comments

Paper: Reducing hallucination in English–Hindi LLMs using citation grounding

https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.18911
1•vedantpandya•35m ago•0 comments

Is there any way to remove an already-pushed commit from GitLab?

1•bluewhalecove•36m ago•1 comments

Engineers do get promoted for writing simple code

https://www.seangoedecke.com/simple-work-gets-rewarded/
3•lalitmaganti•41m ago•0 comments

Intel Arc Pro B70 and Arc Pro B65 GPUs Bring 32GB of RAM to AI and Pro Apps

https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/gpus/intel-arc-pro-b70-and-arc-pro-b65-gpus-bring-32gb...
4•throwaway270925•41m ago•1 comments

The Inside Story of the Greatest Deal Google Ever Made: Buying DeepMind

https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/deepmind-google-demis-hassabis-5bd6de54
1•bookofjoe•41m ago•1 comments

SidClaw – The approval layer for AI agents (open-source)

https://github.com/sidclawhq/platform
1•sidclaw•41m ago•0 comments

Scientists heated a Rocky Mountain wildlife meadow by 2C?

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/mar/25/flowers-heated-2c-meadow-climate-crisis-exper...
1•robaato•43m ago•0 comments

Show HN: An x402 gateway for buying a finished local business website

https://boosterpack.xyz/x402
2•Martibis•43m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Show HN: Stack Error – ergonomic error handling for Rust

https://github.com/gmcgoldr/stackerror
27•garrinm•10mo ago
Stack Error reduces the up-front cost of designing an error handling solution for your project, so that you focus on writing great libraries and applications.

Stack Error has three goals:

1. Provide ergonomics similar to anyhow.

2. Create informative error messages that facilitate debugging.

3. Provide typed data that facilitates runtime error handling.

Comments

tevon•10mo ago
This is awesome! Will give it a try in my next project.

How does it keep track of filename and line number in a compiled binary? I'm fairly new to rust libraries and this doesn't quite make sense to me. I know in JS you need a source-map for minification, how does this work for a compiled language?

fpoling•10mo ago
Rust provides file!, line! and column! macros that expands into a compile-time constants that the compiler embeds then into the executable. This way no source map at runtime is necessary as the relevant errors are constructed from those constants.

Presumably StackError just uses those macros.

But for debugging a source map is still necessary and is a part of various debug formats.

rhabarba•10mo ago
I still prefer the Anyhow solution, but I like the approach here.
IshKebab•10mo ago
Isn't this strictly superior to Anyhow? What do you like more about Anyhow?
rhabarba•10mo ago
I prefer Anyhow's non-intrusiveness: "Result" is still "Result" and all I need is a "?". I agree with Stack Error's documentation that Anyhow can't help with debugging that well, but it's "good enough" in my opinion.
IshKebab•10mo ago
Result in `anyhow::Result` though. It's still a different type. Or do you literally mean you like that it is still spelt the same?

And I think you can still use `?` with this if you don't want to add any context... Not 100% sure on that though.

rhabarba•10mo ago
Might as well be my limited understanding from what I can read behind the link, to be fair.
garrinm•10mo ago
Anyhow still makes things easier for application development. The main drawback is that the resulting error type doesn't implement std::error::Error, so it's not suitable for library development (as pointed out in the anyhow documentation). Stack Error is a bit less ergonomic, but suitable for library development.
shepmaster•10mo ago
I hope to read through your crate and examples later, but if you have a chance, I’d be curious to hear your take on how Stack Error differs from my library, SNAFU [1]!

[1]: https://docs.rs/snafu/latest/snafu/index.html

garrinm•10mo ago
I played around a bit with SNAFU a couple of years ago, but I'm haven't worked deeply with the library so there might well be some features I'm not aware of.

I think SNAFU is more like a combination of anyhow and thiserror into a single crate, rather than Stack Error which leans more heavily into the "turnkey" error struct. Using the Whatever struct, you get some overlap with Stack Error features:

- Error message are co-located.

- Error type implement std::error::Error (suitable for library development).

- External errors can be wrapped and context can easily be added.

Where Stack Error differs:

- Error codes (and URIs) offer ability for runtime error handling without having to compare strings.

- Provides pseudo-stack by stacking messages.

Underlying this is an opinion I baked into Stack Error: error messages are for debugging, not for runtime error handling. Otherwise all your error strings effectively become part of your public interface since a downstream library can rely on them for error handling.

lilyball•10mo ago
If the macros only exist to get file and line information, you could do the same thing by using `#[track_caller]` functions combined with `std::panic::Location` to get that same info. For example, `stack_err!` could be replaced with

  impl StackError {
      #[track_caller]
      fn new_location(msg: impl Display) -> Self {
          let loc = std::panic::Location::caller();
          Self::new(format!("{}:{} {msg}", loc.file(), loc.line()))
      }
  }
such that you call `.map_err(StackError::new_location("data is not a list of strings"))`. A macro is nice if you need to process format strings with arguments (though someone can call `StackError::new_location(format_args!(…))` if they want), but all of your examples show static strings so it's nice to avoid the error in that case.

The use of `std::panic::Location` also means instead of baking that into a format string you could also just have that be an extra field on the error, which would let you expose accessors for it, and you can then print them in your Debug/Display impls.

Speaking of, the Display impl really should not include its source. Standard handling for errors expects that an error prints just itself with Display because it's very common to recurse through sources and print those, so if Display prints the source too then you're duplicating output. Go ahead and print it on Debug though, that's nice for errors returned from `main()`.

garrinm•10mo ago
Thanks for the insight, I wasn't aware of `track_caller`. I'll definitely be looking into this. I was scratching my head trying to figure out how to make file and line number usage consistent and customizable, this looks like the answer!

You're also right that this will pretty much eliminate the need for macros.

That's also a very key insight about Display vs. Debug printing. I'll be looking into that as well.

Thank you for the thoughtful reply.

DavidWilkinson•10mo ago
Dei here, from the team behind Error Stack [1] (a similarly named existing, context-aware error-handling library for Rust that supports arbitrary attachments). How does Stack Error, here, compare?

[1]: https://crates.io/crates/error-stack