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Articles avec le tag OCamlPro
For 12 years now, OCamlPro has been empowering a large range of customers, allowing them to harness state-of-the-art technologies and languages like OCaml and Rust. Our not-so-small-anymore company steadily grew into a team of highly-skilled and passionate engineers, experts in Computer Science, fro... (Lire plus)
OCamlPro was created in 2011 to advocate the adoption of the OCaml language and Formal Methods in general in the industry. 2021 was a very special year as we celebrated our 10th anniversary! While building a team of highly-skilled engineers, we navigated through our expertise domains, programming la... (Lire plus)
2020 at OCamlPro OCamlPro was created in 2011 to advocate the adoption of the OCaml language and formal methods in general in the industry. While building a team of highly-skilled engineers, we navigated through our expertise domains, delivering works on the OCaml language and tooling, training comp... (Lire plus)
2019 at OCamlPro OCamlPro a pour ambition d’aider les industriels dans leur adoption du langage OCaml et des méthodes formelles. L’entreprise est passée d’1 à 21 personnes et est restée fidèle à cet objectif. L’année 2019 chez OCamlPro a été très animée, et le nombre de réalisati... (Lire plus)
2019 at OCamlPro OCamlPro was created to help OCaml and formal methods spread into the industry. We grew from 1 to 21 engineers, still strongly sharing this ambitious goal! The year 2019 at OCamlPro was very lively, with fantastic accomplishments all along! Let's quickly review the past years' works... (Lire plus)
Tezos est aujourd’hui un projet open source, un réseau international développé par des équipes sur plus de cinq continents. Dans la genèse du projet, l’entreprise française OCamlPro, qui développe encore aujourd’hui de nombreux projets liés à Tezos (TZscan, Liquidity, etc.), a joué u... (Lire plus)
Since 2017 is just over, now is probably the best time to review what happened during this hectic year at OCamlPro… Here are our big 2017 achievements, in the world of blockchains (the Liquidity smart contract language, Tezos and the Tezos ICO etc.), of OCaml (with OPAM 2, flambda 2 etc.), and of ... (Lire plus)
A few months ago, a memory leak in the Scanf.fscanf function of OCaml’s standard library has been reported on the OCaml mailing list. The following “minimal” example reproduces this misbehavior: Let us see how to identify the origin of the leak and fix it with our OCaml memory profiler. Instal... (Lire plus)
Once again, here is the summary of our activities for last month. The highlight this month is the release of ocaml-top, an interactive editor for education which works well under Windows and that we hope professors all around the world will use to teach OCaml to their students. We are also continuyi... (Lire plus)
It is time to give a brief summary of our recent activities. As usual, our contributions were focused on three main objectives: make the OCaml compiler faster and easier to use; make the OCaml developers more efficient by releasing new development tools and improving editor supports; organize and pa... (Lire plus)
This post aims at summarizing the activities of OCamlPro for the past month. As usual, we worked in three main areas: the OCaml toolchain, development tools for OCaml and R&D projects. The toolchain Our multi-runtime implementation of OCaml had gained stability. Luca fixed a lot of low-level bugs in... (Lire plus)
Last week, I was bored doing some paperwork, so I decided to hack a little to relieve my mind... Looking for a GUI Framework for OCaml Beginners Some time ago, at OCamlPro, we had discussed the fact that OCaml was lacking more GUI frameworks. Lablgtk is powerful, but I don’t like it (and I expect ... (Lire plus)
From the early days of OCamlPro, people have been curious about our plans; they were asking how we worked at OCamlPro and what we were doing exactly. Now that we have started releasing projects more regularly, these questions come again. They are very reasonable questions, and have resolved to be mo... (Lire plus)
Recently, I have been experimenting wiht OCaml / MSVC running on Windows 7 64bit. I have mainly followed what the OCaml’s README.win32 was saying and I learned some NSIS tricks. The result of this experiment is the following two (rather big) windows binaries : ocaml-trunk-64-installer.exe (92 MB) ... (Lire plus)
When you are beginning in a new programming language, it is sometimes helpful to have an overview of the documentation, that you can pin on your wall and easily have a look at it while you are programming. Since we couldn’t find such Cheat Sheets, we decided to start writting our own cheat sheets ... (Lire plus)
You will need OCaml 3.11.2 installed on a i686 linux computer. The archive contains: libcamlrun-linux-i686.a ocamlrun-linux-i686 Makefile README The Makefile has two targets: sudo make install will save /usr/bin/ocamlrun and /usr/lib/ocaml/libcamlrun.a in the current directory and replace them with ... (Lire plus)
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Articles les plus récents
2024
- opam 2.3.0 release!
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- Flambda2 Ep. 3: Speculative Inlining
- opam 2.2.0 release!
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- Fixing and Optimizing the GnuCOBOL Preprocessor
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2023
- Maturing Learn-OCaml to version 1.0: Gateway to the OCaml World
- The latest release of Alt-Ergo version 2.5.1 is out, with improved SMT-LIB and bitvector support!
- 2022 at OCamlPro
- Autofonce, GNU Autotests Revisited
- Sub-single-instruction Peano to machine integer conversion
- Statically guaranteeing security properties on Java bytecode: Paper presentation at VMCAI 23
- Release of ocplib-simplex, version 0.5