This week the article Wasm is not quite a stack machine has been
making the rounds and has caught my eye. The post claims that WASM is not a pure
stack machine because it has locals and is missing some stack manipulation
operations like dup and swap.
While I don't …
This page is auto-generated from Github Actions workflow that runs every day at night and fetches the 5 latest articles from each of my favorite blogs.
When two goroutines go to war, a data race is all that you can score. To
prevent that, Go’s sync.Mutex type can help.
A Go closure holds a live reference to whatever it captures, not a snapshot. Real examples of where this trips people up, and how to keep it boring.
#598 — April 24, 2026
Read the Web Version
Go Weekly
TinyGo 0.41: Go 1.26 Support, ESP32 Wireless, and More — A huge release for the “Go compiler for small places”! Go 1.26 support arrives, along with wireless support for ESP32...
When I was working on the WASM backend for my Scheme compiler,
I ran into several tricky situations with debugging generated WASM code. It
turned out that Chrome has a very capable WASM debugger in its DevTools, so in
this brief post I want to share how it can be …
In the previous article
we saw how sysmon steps in every 10ms to call netpoll(0) on behalf of busy Ps, making sure network I/O doesn’t stall when the scheduler is too busy to poll on its own. We glossed over what that network poller actually is. Today we’re fixing th...
Introduction
In the previous post, you saw how you can use tools to add information to an LLM query. In this post, we’ll see another method of adding information to an LLM called RAG, or Retrieval-Augmented Generation.
The idea of RAG is that you want the LLM to have access...