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LLVM

The LLVM compiler infrastructure project is a set of compiler and toolchain technologies, which can be used to develop a front end for any programming language and a back end for any instruction set architecture.

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numba
brunojacobs
brunojacobs commented Jun 14, 2022
  • I have tried using the latest released version of Numba (most recent is
    visible in the change log (https://github.com/numba/numba/blob/main/CHANGE_LOG).
  • I have included a self contained code sample to reproduce the problem.
    i.e. it's possible to run as 'python bug.py'.

I think I have discovered a very minor bug - or rather inconsistency with numpy - in Numba's implementation

good first issue bug - failure to compile

Checked C is an extension to C that lets programmers write C code that is guaranteed by the compiler to be type-safe. The goal is to let people easily make their existing C code type-safe and eliminate entire classes of errors. Checked C does not address use-after-free errors. This repo has a wiki for Checked C, sample code, the specification, and test code.
  • Updated Nov 3, 2021
  • C
xmnlab
xmnlab commented Mar 19, 2019

Hey everyone!

mapd-core-cpu is already available on conda-forge (https://anaconda.org/conda-forge/omniscidb-cpu)

now we should add some instructions on the documentation.

at this moment it is available for linux and osx.

some additional information about the configuration:

  1. for now, always install omniscidb-cpu inside a conda environment (also it is a good practice), eg:
Aiethel
Aiethel commented Oct 19, 2019

While the test_suite presented in #589 does work, it is still pretty simple and can be improved and enhanced.

  • Add tests for gnutils and coreutils.
  • Add necessary utilities so more complex programs can be compiled from sources.
  • Integrate CMake, so one could write something like make validate and the subset of test that is deemed necessary (for example everything with min t
eine
eine commented Apr 9, 2020

Currently, the architecture of the CLI is based on (sub)commands and options. Commands are expected to be provided as the first argument, and do effectively decide which feature is to be used. OTOH, options provide parameters to the commands. However, there is no syntactical difference, as both commands and options start with -- or -i. As a result, we rely on properly formating --help and on

gamesh411
gamesh411 commented May 27, 2020

The CodeChecker cmd subcommand communicates with the server via Thrift, and on a Jenkins docker image, I have tried to use it to get run information from a local CodeChecker server. The output of the CodeChecker cmd runs command was just the help message. I have found out that using a proxy is not supported right now, and the issue was solved by disabling proxy via unsetting the environmental

jfecher
jfecher commented Jun 23, 2022

They are awful.

To elaborate, currently the parser will usually issue an error in the form "failed trying to parse a " where may be term, expression, pattern, etc. Sometimes it will give even worse errors resembling "parser expected end of input, but got ..." which does not explain well what the user did that was wrong. The parser also stops after 1 error currently. A recoverable

good first issue
fabianschuiki
fabianschuiki commented Jul 6, 2022

It would be great if circt-reduce would try to apply reductions on the "juiciest" operations first, to hopefully get the input size down quickly.

Currently the reducer walks the IR, considering only ops to which the current reduction applies, numbers them, and applies the reduction to those ops whose number are inside the current "reduction chunk". The chunks get progressively smaller, in a b

good first issue Reducer

Created by Vikram Adve, Chris Lattner

Released 2019

Latest release 12 days ago

Repository
llvm/llvm-project
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