Forth is an imperative stack-based programming language, and a member of the class of extensible interactive languages. Here’s our recommended tutorials.
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Forth is an imperative stack-based programming language, and a member of the class of extensible interactive languages. Here’s our recommended tutorials.
Read moreLast Updated on August 20, 2020 This is a weekly blog about the Raspberry Pi 4 (“RPI4”), the latest product in the popular Raspberry Pi range of computers. UPDATE: In Week 26, I revisit Firefox again, as the Raspbian repositories
Read moreProlog is a general purpose, declarative, logic programming language. Here’s a curated list of excellent free Prolog tutorials.
Read morennn is a free and open source terminal file manager written in the C programming language. nnn focuses on performance over features.
Read moreScheme is a general-purpose, functional, programming language descended from Lisp and Algol. Here’s our recommended tutorials to learn Scheme.
Read moreFor this week, I’m going to look at a few retro games, all nestling in Raspbian’s repositories. Free and open source gaming.
Read moreHaskell is a standardized, general-purpose, polymorphically statically typed, lazy, purely functional language. Here’s our recommended Haskell tutorials.
Read morexcowsay is a tiny utility that displays a cow with a speech bubble containing some text. It’s free and open source goodness.
Read moreAda is a structured, statically typed, imperative, wide-spectrum, multi-paradigm, object-oriented high-level language. Here’s our recommended Ada tutorials.
Read moreFor this week’s blog, I turn to a desktop activity that I use fairly frequently. It’s screen capturing – sharing something on my computer screen with a colleague or friend. How does the Raspberry Pi 4 fare?
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