Detect Thoughts vs My Lisp使用状況と統計
iOS and iPadOS don't have a curl command line for all the testing. Nor should a mobile operating system! Detect Thoughts takes the logic from a. curl command a makes it simpler to send a query to a standard REST endpoint on a web server. It supports GET, POST, PUT, and DELETE methods. It also supports Bearer token authentication, basic auth, and OAuth 2 (although that might be considered a bit more experimental given all the potential flows that can crop up. Detect Thoughts can also support a number of different headers and parameters.
Detect Thoughts is simple to use. Just enter the endpoint, headers, parameters, auth if necessary, and click Submit to see what the actual curl command would be if sent through the Terminal and then submit to see a color-coded json response. This might be useful for developers who just want to provide a simple graphql type of endpoint for someone to see a simple output without building a whole page for it. There's also a history button so we can return to an endpoint over and over.
Detect Thoughts is also useful for web developers to test their own code from an iPhone. This is a free app in its compiled form but it's also meant to easily be dropped into other Swift projects to add (as an example) a developer mode to other projects. The source is at https://github.com/krypted/DevModeCuRL
If there's anything missing from the open source version that's in the compiled Detect Thoughts, it probably just needs a quick update but they should otherwise be in sync.
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My Lisp is a complete and universal Lisp environment running directly on the iPhone, iPad, and Mac. This interpreter is true to the original John McCarthy Lisp implementation with the fundamental 7 operators quote, atom, eq, car, cdr, cons, cond, along with lambda and label. My Lisp also contains core and mathematical operators borrowed from other Lisp dialects (Le Lisp, Lisp 1.5, MacLisp, Common Lisp and Scheme to name a few) to make it easy to learn, program, and most importantly, enjoy Lisp. It also features built-in functions for advanced mathematics, including complex numbers and numerical analysis (roots and zeros finder, integral approximation). The complete description of the fundamental, core, and built-in functions is available using a set of library functions completely written in My Lisp.
My Lisp offers an interpreter and an editor, all working on the iPhone, iPad, and Mac, and most importantly, without requiring any server connection, that is, the interpreter is executing locally on the iPhone, iPad or Mac My Lisp is installed on.
Library and example files contain the source code of classical functions and problems solved by My Lisp and may be used as reference to learn Lisp and develop other programs. They include classical puzzles (hanoi and n-queens), basic mathematical functions (gcd, lcm, factorial, fibonacci, prime?), and the historical apply, mapcar and maplist functions. The Lambda Calculus example file contains various functions related to Lambda Calculus and Combinators, with alpha-conversion, beta-reduction, de Bruijn notations, etc. As a special note, the example file Symbolic Derivation contains a complete yet extensible symbolic derivation module allowing to compute the formal derivation of virtually any symbolic function expressed as a Lisp expression.
A user manual and a reference manual are available from within the application but also on My Lisp web site (https://lisp.lsrodier.net) and in Apple Books. The complete source code of the library and example files is part of My Lisp.
Last but not least, this overview couldn’t end without a sample definition of the notorious REPL function:
(define (REPL eval_me) (REPL (println (eval (read)))))
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Detect Thoughts対My Lispランキング比較
と過去28日間の Detect Thoughts ランキング傾向を比較 My Lisp
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Detect Thoughts 対 My Lisp 国の比較によるランキング
と過去28日間の Detect Thoughts ランキング傾向を比較 My Lisp
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Detect Thoughts VS.
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12月 11, 2024