Hi
user
Admin Login:
Username:
Password:
Name:
Transpile anything to everything!
--client
lca
--show
lca2020
--room room_8 15175 --force
Next: 1 How to make kernel and user space CI for input devices?
show more...
Marks
Author(s):
Anna Herlihy
Location
Room 8
Date
jan Fri 17
Days Raw Files
Start
13:30
First Raw Start
error-in-template
Duration
0:45:0
Offset
None
End
14:15
Last Raw End
Chapters
Total cuts_time
None min.
https://lca2020.linux.org.au/schedule/presentation/15/
raw-playlist
raw-mp4-playlist
encoded-files-playlist
mp4
svg
png
assets
release.pdf
Transpile_anything_to_everything.json
logs
Admin:
episode
episode list
cut list
raw files day
marks day
marks day
image_files
State:
---------
borked
edit
encode
push to queue
post
richard
review 1
email
review 2
make public
tweet
to-miror
conf
done
Locked:
clear this to unlock
Locked by:
user/process that locked.
Start:
initially scheduled time from master, adjusted to match reality
Duration:
length in hh:mm:ss
Name:
Video Title (shows in video search results)
Emails:
email(s) of the presenter(s)
Released:
Unknown
Yes
No
has someone authorised pubication
Normalise:
Channelcopy:
m=mono, 01=copy left to right, 10=right to left, 00=ignore.
Thumbnail:
filename.png
Description:
Compass, the UI for MongoDB, is an Electron app that allows developers to visually develop aggregations and queries for their database. Right now it accepts these queries in the MongoDB Shell syntax, a JavaScript-based query language. However, developers use a wide range of programming languages in their apps, and constant context switching between languages can be painful. To cure this pain, we wanted to allow users to export the queries they built in Compass into whatever programming language they wanted. Even better, we wanted to also allow users to write their favorite language directly into Compass. To achieve these goals, we needed a way to translate query syntax in any programming language into query syntax in any other language, so we needed to write a multi-language-input to multi-language-output transpiler in web-friendly JavaScript! Further, since MongoDB has so many diverse and passionate language communities, I really wanted the transpiler to be “pluggable” - community members should be able to add their favorite language to Compass without needing to be compiler experts or know about what other languages were implemented. It is not enough to simply open source the code and hope people contribute. The compiler was architected with distributed collaboration in mind from the very start, and this talk will describe all the steps we took to make the barrier to contribution as low as possible. This talk will go through the technical design of the anything-to-anything pluggable transpiler and teach attendees how they can add their own favorite language to Compass. I’ll talk about classic compiler design principles and how I leveraged various compiler technologies to create a dynamic, extensible transpiler. Lastly, I’ll talk about how we can take this transpiler and apply it to an abundance of other use cases! Who should attend? Anyone with an interest in open source, compilers, parsers, Compass, MongoDB, ANTLR, or a general passion for complex technical problems is welcome. I will talk about classic compiler design without requiring attendees to be programming-language experts, although any knowledge of compiler implementations will be useful. Attendees will leave the talk knowing exactly how to extend Compass to support new languages and will hopefully be inspired to go out and add their favorite language to Compass! Why should they attend? This talk addresses both MongoDB-specific challenges as well as highly technical computer science problems. Attendees will learn not only about Compass itself, but about compiler design. As developers we use compilers every day, but it is not so often that we get the opportunity to actually write them, and compilers are awesome!
markdown
Comment:
production notes
Rf filename:
root is .../show/dv/location/, example: 2013-03-13/13:13:30.dv
Sequence:
get this:
check and save to add this
Veyepar
Video Eyeball Processor and Review