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I'm helping my dog vibe code games

https://www.calebleak.com/posts/dog-game/
706•cleak•11h ago•206 comments

Show HN: Moonshine Open-Weights STT models – higher accuracy than WhisperLargev3

https://github.com/moonshine-ai/moonshine
158•petewarden•6h ago•30 comments

Mac mini will be made at a new facility in Houston

https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2026/02/apple-accelerates-us-manufacturing-with-mac-mini-production/
397•haunter•7h ago•393 comments

Justifying Text-Wrap: Pretty

https://matklad.github.io/2026/02/14/justifying-text-wrap-pretty.html
63•surprisetalk•5d ago•20 comments

Pi – A minimal terminal coding harness

https://pi.dev
217•kristianpaul•6h ago•99 comments

Mercury 2: The fastest reasoning LLM, powered by diffusion

https://www.inceptionlabs.ai/blog/introducing-mercury-2
116•fittingopposite•5h ago•69 comments

Amazon accused of widespread scheme to inflate prices across the economy

https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/amazon-busted-for-widespread-price
195•toomuchtodo•3h ago•56 comments

Hacking an old Kindle to display bus arrival times

https://www.mariannefeng.com/portfolio/kindle/
191•mengchengfeng•8h ago•44 comments

Code has always been the easy part

https://laughingmeme.org/2026/02/09/code-has-always-been-the-easy-part.html
65•Ozzie_osman•3d ago•64 comments

Nearby Glasses

https://github.com/yjeanrenaud/yj_nearbyglasses
264•zingerlio•10h ago•103 comments

Steel Bank Common Lisp

https://www.sbcl.org/
166•tosh•9h ago•61 comments

I pitched a roller coaster to Disneyland at age 10 in 1978

https://wordglyph.xyz/one-piece-at-a-time
406•wordglyph•15h ago•155 comments

Corgi Labs (YC W23) Is Hiring

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/corgi-labs/jobs/ZiEIf7a-founders-associate
1•leastsquares•3h ago

Show HN: Recursively apply patterns for pathfinding

https://pattern-pathfinder.vercel.app/?fixtureId=%7B%22path%22%3A%22site%2Fexamples%2F_intro.fixt...
17•seveibar•6h ago•4 comments

Hugging Face Skills

https://github.com/huggingface/skills
145•armcat•10h ago•41 comments

Anthropic Drops Flagship Safety Pledge

https://time.com/7380854/exclusive-anthropic-drops-flagship-safety-pledge/
100•cwwc•3h ago•35 comments

Optophone

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optophone
52•Hooke•4d ago•9 comments

Show HN: Emdash – Open-source agentic development environment

https://github.com/generalaction/emdash
122•onecommit•10h ago•52 comments

Aesthetics of single threading

https://ta.fo/aesthetics-of-single-threading/
39•todsacerdoti•3d ago•6 comments

Looks like it is happening

https://www.math.columbia.edu/~woit/wordpress/?p=15500
141•jjgreen•6h ago•99 comments

Stripe valued at $159B, 2025 annual letter

https://stripe.com/newsroom/news/stripe-2025-update
175•jez•13h ago•188 comments

We installed a single turnstile to feel secure

https://idiallo.com/blog/installed-single-turnstile-for-security-theater
296•firefoxd•2d ago•135 comments

IRS Tactics Against Meta Open a New Front in the Corporate Tax Fight

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/24/business/irs-meta-corporate-taxes.html
191•mitchbob•15h ago•202 comments

We are changing our developer productivity experiment design

https://metr.org/blog/2026-02-24-uplift-update/
56•ej88•8h ago•36 comments

Build Your Own Forth Interpreter

https://codingchallenges.fyi/challenges/challenge-forth/
59•AlexeyBrin•3d ago•17 comments

IDF killed Gaza aid workers at point blank range in 2025 massacre: Report

https://www.dropsitenews.com/p/israeli-soldiers-tel-sultan-gaza-red-crescent-civil-defense-massac...
1442•Qem•16h ago•548 comments

OpenAI, the US government and Persona built an identity surveillance machine

https://vmfunc.re/blog/persona/
494•rzk•9h ago•159 comments

Why the KeePass format should be based on SQLite

https://mketab.org/blog/sqlite_kdbx/
92•wps•15h ago•67 comments

US Military leaders meet with Anthropic to argue against Claude safeguards

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/feb/24/anthropic-claude-military-ai
82•KnuthIsGod•3h ago•35 comments

The history of knocking on wood

https://resobscura.substack.com/p/neolithic-habits-machine-age-tools
19•benbreen•13h ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Extending a Language – Writing Powerful Macros in Scheme

https://mnieper.github.io/scheme-macros/README.html
92•textread•9mo ago

Comments

neilv•9mo ago
A few formatting changes might make this advanced example easier to understand:

    (define-syntax trace-let
      (syntax-rules ()
        [(trace-let name ([var expr] ...) body1 ... body2)
         (let f ([depth 0] [var expr] ...)
           (define name
             (lambda (var ...)
               (f (+ depth 1) var ...)))
           (indent depth)
           (display "(")
           (display 'name)
           (begin
             (display " ")
             (display var))
           ...
           (display ")")
           (newline)
           (call-with-values
               (lambda ()
                 body1 ... body2)
             (lambda val*
               (indent depth)
               (fold-left
                (lambda (sep val)
                  (display sep)
                  (display val)
                  " ")
                "" val*)
               (newline)
               (apply values val*))))]))
The biggest one is to make the rule template pattern variables all-uppercase. I also made a few other tweaks, including using indentation a little more, and naming the named-`let` variable as "loop" (I usually name it `loop` or prefix the name with `loop-` if there's more than one):

    (define-syntax trace-let
      (syntax-rules ()
        ((trace-let NAME ((VAR EXPR) ...) BODY1 ... BODY2)
         (let loop ((depth 0)
                    (VAR   EXPR) ...)
           (define NAME
             (lambda (VAR ...)
               (loop (+ depth 1) VAR ...)))
           (indent depth)
           (display "(")
           (display (quote NAME))
           (begin (display " ")
                  (display VAR)) ...
           (display ")")
           (newline)
           (call-with-values (lambda ()
                               BODY1 ... BODY2)
             (lambda val*
               (indent depth)
               (fold-left (lambda (sep val)
                            (display sep)
                            (display val)
                            " ")
                          ""
                          val*)
               (newline)
               (apply values val*)))))))
Incidentally, all-uppercase Scheme pattern variables is one of the all-time best uses of all-uppercase in any language. Second only to all-uppercase for the C preprocessor, where a preprocessor macro can introduce almost arbitrary text. Using all-uppercase for constants in some language that has constants, however, is an abomination.

(My suspicion of why Java did all-caps is that they were developing a language for embedded systems developers who were currently using C and C++, and they wanted to make it superficially look similar, even though it was an entirely different language. And then, ironically, the language ended up being used mostly by the analogue of a very different developer of the time: corporate internal information systems developers, who, as a field, didn't use anything like C. It's too late to save Java, but to all other language and API developers, please stop the insanity of all-caps constants, enum values, etc. It's not the most important thing that needs to jump out from the code above all other things.)

Y_Y•9mo ago
FWIW, all-caps makes this look much worse to me. I understand that people like things like Hungarian notation, arrows over vector names, and shouting Common Lisp symbols. I understand the argument that it can make reading easier. I just can't appreciate that benefit, and it seems to me an ugly hack which obscures the abstract and general symbolic manipulation going on.

This is all highly subjective of course, de gustibus non disputandem.

neilv•9mo ago
You mean aesthetically, in that interspersed all-caps makes the code visually less soothingly sensual?

I can sympathize, but let me make a non-aesthetic argument...

In large blocks of code, with all-caps, you can see at a glance where all the template substitutions are happening, and also instantly know as you're reading code what are variables and what are template substitutions?

I'm asking because one of my realizations in recent years is that not everyone reads or sees code the same way.

For example, maybe some people are stronger "visual" and some people are stronger "verbal".

For another example of a different in how people perceive and think, some people can visualize an object in their mind almost as if they're looking at it, but other people can only know and describe what it looks like without bringing a visual of it into their head.

With the benefit of the all-caps, I can glance at this and immediately see much of the structure of the template. Without all-caps, I'd have to work harder to find all the pattern variables, and the structure would be obscured.

For a bit kludgy practical matter, as I'm quickly looking at pieces of code in a template, with all-caps, I can look at a fragment of code in isolation and know what are and aren't pattern variables. Without that, I have to go read the top of the template clause (and read through any syntactic scopes of `let-syntax`) and get that in my head, until I get to the fragment of code I originally wanted to look at.

IDE support can make this unnecessary, with a hypothetical great IDE, with familiar syntax coloring. But still, if there is one thing that all-caps should be reserved for, it's something like this.

With all-caps, your code can be sensual, and the jolting all-caps bits are look out, potentially arbitrary code gets pasted into here.

Y_Y•9mo ago
Since you asked, my objection is both aesthetic and semantic, though I was really referring to the semantic part above.

I think you've hit the nail on the head with this visual vs. verbal distinction.

I can add a few clarifying details. I don't use IDEs as much as basic text editors maybe with highlighting, and I try not to rely on any fancy features. It does worry me that the allcaps use you describe is (afaik) not known to the editor or interpreter, so if you make a mistake or the symbol gets out of sync with its meaning (re: pattern variables) you may have a false signal. Finally I'll say that in the end I can't suggest a good way to treat these special variables, and so maybe I don't get it, or tastes like mine would be better served by a different formalism for macros.

mnemenaut•9mo ago
https://github.com/rogerturner/scheme-macros/blob/main/examp... shows stepwise development of a trace-let [the `(example: (fn arg) => result)` forms are tests - see check-examples library]