Super HN

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31. Show HN: Fun things to do with your VM/370 machine
Fun things to do with mainframes
32. Install.md: A standard for LLM-executable installation
A proposal for a standard /install.md file that provides LLM-executable installation instructions.
33. Zep AI (Agent Context Engineering, YC W24) Is Hiring Forward Deployed Engineers
Jobs at Zep AI
34. Meditation and Unconscious: A Buddhist Monk and a Neuroscientist (2022)
35. Michelangelo's First Painting, Created When He Was Only 12 or 13 Years Old
Think back, if you will, to the works of art you created at age twelve or thirteen. For many, perhaps most of us, our output at that stage of adolescence amounted to directionless doodles, chaotic comics, and a few unsteady-at-best school projects. Open Culture, openculture.com
36. Dev-Owned Testing: Why It Fails in Practice and Succeeds in Theory
37. Beebo, a wave simulator written in C
38. Interactive eBPF
39. Experts Warn of Growing Parrot Crisis in Canada
The largest parrot rescue in eastern Ontario is launching a pilot project to help address what experts are calling a parrot crisis. CTV’s Katelyn Wilson reports
40. Just the Browser
Remove AI features, telemetry data reporting, sponsored content, product integrations, and other annoyances from web browsers.
41. The 'untouchable hacker god' behind Finland's biggest ever crime
How would you feel if your therapist’s notes – your darkest thoughts and deepest feelings – were exposed to the world? For 33,000 Finnish people, that became a terrifying reality, with deadly consequences
42. Artisanal Code
> Our single-origin, small-batch code is traceable through its commit history to artisanal programmers and traditional foundries. Incorporating a confluence of different cultures and languages, our code is hand-crafted, wrought through pull requests, processed on baremetal and roasted to perfection in a cast-iron CI/CD pipeline - giving you a bold, full-bodied, rich shot of open-source goodness. The perfect start to your day.
43. Slop Is Everywhere for Those with Eyes to See
How mindless consumption is making our FYPs worse.
44. psc: The ps utility, with an eBPF twist and container context
the ps utility, with an eBPF twist and container context - loresuso/psc
45. Training my smartwatch to track intelligence
Training my watch to track intelligence
46. AWS Duvet: a bidirectional link between implementation and specification
47. Lock-Picking Robot
Lock picking robot. Contribute to etinaude/Lock-Picking-Robot development by creating an account on GitHub.
48. Ask HN: Could you share your personal website here?
49. Why DuckDB is my first choice for data processing
Why DuckDB has become my go-to tool for data processing, offering simplicity, speed, and powerful features.
50. Boeing knew of flaw in part linked to UPS plane crash
An aircraft that crashed in November had a structural flaw that had been identified by Boeing 15 years ago, investigators say.
51. Judge orders Anna's Archive to delete scraped data from WorldCat
WorldCat operator hopes default judgment will convince web hosts to take action.
52. Why Greenland's natural resources are nearly impossible to mine
The country’s natural landscape makes the task extremely difficult, though that has not stopped Trump’s aspirations
53. Re: Mix: open-source repairable blender
Official documentation for re:Mix, the kitchen mixer good for people and the planet. - openfunkHQ/reMix
54. Our approach to advertising and expanding access to ChatGPT
55. CLI's completion should know what options you've typed
Consider Git's -C option: git -C /path/to/repo checkout When you hit Tab, Git completes branch names from /path/to/repo, not yourcurrent directory. The completion is context-aware—it depends on the value ofanother option. Most CLI parsers can't do this. They treat each option in isolation, socompletion for --branch has no way of knowing the --repo value. You end upwith two unpleasant choices: either show completions for all possiblebranches across all repositories (useless), or give up on completion entirelyfor these options. Optique 0.10.0 introduces a dependency system that solves this problem whilepreserving full type safety. Static dependencies with or() Optique already handles certain kinds of dependent options via the or()combinator: import { flag, object, option, or, string } from "@optique/core";const outputOptions = or( object({ json: flag("--json"), pretty: flag("--pretty"), }), object({ csv: flag("--csv"), delimiter: option("--delimiter", string()), }),); TypeScript knows that if json is true, you'll have a pretty field, and ifcsv is true, you'll have a delimiter field. The parser enforces this atruntime, and shell completion will suggest --pretty only when --json ispresent. This works well when the valid combinations are known at definition time. Butit can't handle cases where valid values depend on runtime input—likebranch names that vary by repository. Runtime dependencies Common scenarios include: A deployment CLI where --environment affects which services are available A database tool where --connection affects which tables can be completed A cloud CLI where --project affects which resources are shown In each case, you can't know the valid values until you know what the usertyped for the dependency option. Optique 0.10.0 introduces dependency() andderive() to handle exactly this. The dependency system The core idea is simple: mark one option as a dependency source, then createderived parsers that use its value. import { choice, dependency, message, object, option, string,} from "@optique/core";function getRefsFromRepo(repoPath: string): string[] { // In real code, this would read from the Git repository return ["main", "develop", "feature/login"];}// Mark as a dependency sourceconst repoParser = dependency(string());// Create a derived parserconst refParser = repoParser.derive({ metavar: "REF", factory: (repoPath) => { const refs = getRefsFromRepo(repoPath); return choice(refs); }, defaultValue: () => ".",});const parser = object({ repo: option("--repo", repoParser, { description: message`Path to the repository`, }), ref: option("--ref", refParser, { description: message`Git reference`, }),}); The factory function is where the dependency gets resolved. It receives theactual value the user provided for --repo and returns a parser that validatesagainst refs from that specific repository. Under the hood, Optique uses a three-phase parsing strategy: Parse all options in a first pass, collecting dependency values Call factory functions with the collected values to create concrete parsers Re-parse derived options using those dynamically created parsers This means both validation and completion work correctly—if the user hasalready typed --repo /some/path, the --ref completion will show refs fromthat path. Repository-aware completion with @optique/git The @optique/git package provides async value parsers that read from Gitrepositories. Combined with the dependency system, you can build CLIs withrepository-aware completion: import { command, dependency, message, object, option, string,} from "@optique/core";import { gitBranch } from "@optique/git";const repoParser = dependency(string());const branchParser = repoParser.deriveAsync({ metavar: "BRANCH", factory: (repoPath) => gitBranch({ dir: repoPath }), defaultValue: () => ".",});const checkout = command( "checkout", object({ repo: option("--repo", repoParser, { description: message`Path to the repository`, }), branch: option("--branch", branchParser, { description: message`Branch to checkout`, }), }),); Now when you type my-cli checkout --repo /path/to/project --branch , thecompletion will show branches from /path/to/project. The defaultValue of"." means that if --repo isn't specified, it falls back to the currentdirectory. Multiple dependencies Sometimes a parser needs values from multiple options. The deriveFrom()function handles this: import { choice, dependency, deriveFrom, message, object, option,} from "@optique/core";function getAvailableServices(env: string, region: string): string[] { return [`${env}-api-${region}`, `${env}-web-${region}`];}const envParser = dependency(choice(["dev", "staging", "prod"] as const));const regionParser = dependency(choice(["us-east", "eu-west"] as const));const serviceParser = deriveFrom({ dependencies: [envParser, regionParser] as const, metavar: "SERVICE", factory: (env, region) => { const services = getAvailableServices(env, region); return choice(services); }, defaultValues: () => ["dev", "us-east"] as const,});const parser = object({ env: option("--env", envParser, { description: message`Deployment environment`, }), region: option("--region", regionParser, { description: message`Cloud region`, }), service: option("--service", serviceParser, { description: message`Service to deploy`, }),}); The factory receives values in the same order as the dependency array. Ifsome dependencies aren't provided, Optique uses the defaultValues. Async support Real-world dependency resolution often involves I/O—reading from Gitrepositories, querying APIs, accessing databases. Optique provides asyncvariants for these cases: import { dependency, string } from "@optique/core";import { gitBranch } from "@optique/git";const repoParser = dependency(string());const branchParser = repoParser.deriveAsync({ metavar: "BRANCH", factory: (repoPath) => gitBranch({ dir: repoPath }), defaultValue: () => ".",}); The @optique/git package uses isomorphic-git under the hood, sogitBranch(), gitTag(), and gitRef() all work in both Node.js and Deno. There's also deriveSync() for when you need to be explicit about synchronousbehavior, and deriveFromAsync() for multiple async dependencies. Wrapping up The dependency system lets you build CLIs where options are aware of eachother—not just for validation, but for shell completion too. You get typesafety throughout: TypeScript knows the relationship between your dependencysources and derived parsers, and invalid combinations are caught at compiletime. This is particularly useful for tools that interact with external systems wherethe set of valid values isn't known until runtime. Git repositories, cloudproviders, databases, container registries—anywhere the completion choicesdepend on context the user has already provided. This feature will be available in Optique 0.10.0. To try the pre-release: deno add jsr:@optique/core@0.10.0-dev.311 Or with npm: npm install @optique/core@0.10.0-dev.311 See the documentation for more details.
56. Apple Is Fighting for TSMC Capacity as Nvidia Takes Center Stage
[Exclusive] A 15-year relationship helped TSMC grow and Apple leap ahead of rivals, but now it's struggling to get enough capacity as it competes with Nvidia for supply
57. Local-only Marstek Venus e-battery integration with Home Assistant
A personal code notes blog
58. Show HN: An LLM-optimized programming language
Contribute to imjasonh/imjasonh development by creating an account on GitHub.
59. The Alignment Game
A game to align people and priorities
60. OpenBSD-current now runs as guest under Apple Hypervisor