This page is no longer maintained — Please continue to the home page at www.scala-lang.org

[intro]doukaku.org -- Colosseum of the code

4 replies
shuji yamamoto
Joined: 2009-06-17,
User offline. Last seen 42 years 45 weeks ago.

Hi.

In Japan , There is code competition in Japan: DOUKAKU.ORG
http://ja.doukaku.org/
Contributer make a code by freely selected language.

Scala is well. but Smalltalk,Python,Ruby,Haskell work better it seem:
http://ja.doukaku.org/lang/

Scala code is here:
http://ja.doukaku.org/lang/scala/

Unfortunetely , thema is written in Japanise.
Some contributed codes help you understand what thema says :-)

Thanks.

sadie
Joined: 2008-12-21,
User offline. Last seen 42 years 45 weeks ago.
Re: [intro]doukaku.org -- Colosseum of the code

The name "Doukaku?" means "How do you write?". The site appears to consist of
a series of reasonably simple challenges, such as "write an example of the
loan pattern when using a resource" or "translate C's printf into a printf
in your own language", which are answered in a variety of languages. Scala
seems to be doing pretty well.

My Japanese isn't strong enough for me to brave any of the challenges myself
- I don't want to waste time answering the wrong question.

shuji yamamoto wrote:
>
> Hi.
>
> In Japan , There is code competition in Japan: DOUKAKU.ORG
> http://ja.doukaku.org/
> Contributer make a code by freely selected language.
>
> Scala is well. but Smalltalk,Python,Ruby,Haskell work better it seem:
> http://ja.doukaku.org/lang/
>
> Scala code is here:
> http://ja.doukaku.org/lang/scala/
>
> Unfortunetely , thema is written in Japanise.
> Some contributed codes help you understand what thema says :-)
>
> Thanks.
>
>
>

shuji yamamoto
Joined: 2009-06-17,
User offline. Last seen 42 years 45 weeks ago.
Re: [intro]doukaku.org -- Colosseum of the code

On Wed, 24 Jun 2009 08:39:09 +0900, Marcus Downing
wrote:

I hope to enjoy code exploring.
And , is there such kind of site?
I found some wiki-base site.
eg) http://en.literateprograms.org/LiteratePrograms:Welcome

But , Doukaku is like art of zen mondo :)
Thema is thrown by contributer too.
Good one is evaluated as (+).
Bad one is evaluated as (-).
Perl hacker , Lisp hacker , C hacker and Scala hacker are gathered in "the
temple" of Doukaku ;)

Thanks.

> The name "Doukaku?" means "How do you write?".
Yes.

> The site appears to consist of
> a series of reasonably simple challenges, such as "write an example of
> the
> loan pattern when using a resource" or "translate C's printf into a
> printf
> in your own language", which are answered in a variety of languages.
> Scala
> seems to be doing pretty well.
>
> My Japanese isn't strong enough for me to brave any of the challenges
> myself
> - I don't want to waste time answering the wrong question.
>
>
>
> shuji yamamoto wrote:
>>
>> Hi.
>>
>> In Japan , There is code competition in Japan: DOUKAKU.ORG
>> http://ja.doukaku.org/
>> Contributer make a code by freely selected language.
>>
>> Scala is well. but Smalltalk,Python,Ruby,Haskell work better it seem:
>> http://ja.doukaku.org/lang/
>>
>> Scala code is here:
>> http://ja.doukaku.org/lang/scala/
>>
>> Unfortunetely , thema is written in Japanise.
>> Some contributed codes help you understand what thema says :-)
>>
>> Thanks.
>>
>>
>>
>

Landei
Joined: 2008-12-18,
User offline. Last seen 45 weeks 4 days ago.
Re: [intro]doukaku.org -- Colosseum of the code

shuji yamamoto wrote:
>
> On Wed, 24 Jun 2009 08:39:09 +0900, Marcus Downing
> wrote:
>
> I hope to enjoy code exploring.
> And , is there such kind of site?
> I found some wiki-base site.
> eg) http://en.literateprograms.org/LiteratePrograms:Welcome
>
> But , Doukaku is like art of zen mondo :)
> Thema is thrown by contributer too.
> Good one is evaluated as (+).
> Bad one is evaluated as (-).
> Perl hacker , Lisp hacker , C hacker and Scala hacker are gathered in "the
> temple" of Doukaku ;)
>
> Thanks.
>
>> The name "Doukaku?" means "How do you write?".
> Yes.
>
>> The site appears to consist of
>> a series of reasonably simple challenges, such as "write an example of
>> the
>> loan pattern when using a resource" or "translate C's printf into a
>> printf
>> in your own language", which are answered in a variety of languages.
>> Scala
>> seems to be doing pretty well.
>>
>> My Japanese isn't strong enough for me to brave any of the challenges
>> myself
>> - I don't want to waste time answering the wrong question.
>>
>>
>>
>> shuji yamamoto wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi.
>>>
>>> In Japan , There is code competition in Japan: DOUKAKU.ORG
>>> http://ja.doukaku.org/
>>> Contributer make a code by freely selected language.
>>>
>>> Scala is well. but Smalltalk,Python,Ruby,Haskell work better it seem:
>>> http://ja.doukaku.org/lang/
>>>
>>> Scala code is here:
>>> http://ja.doukaku.org/lang/scala/
>>>
>>> Unfortunetely , thema is written in Japanise.
>>> Some contributed codes help you understand what thema says :-)
>>>
>>> Thanks.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>

面白いです、ね。寄るつもりです。 (Interesting, I'll have a look)

じゃ また。
ダニエル
...with excuses for my bad Japanese :-)

Derek Chen-Becker
Joined: 2008-12-16,
User offline. Last seen 42 years 45 weeks ago.
Re: [intro]doukaku.org -- Colosseum of the code

shuji yamamoto wrote:
> On Wed, 24 Jun 2009 08:39:09 +0900, Marcus Downing
> wrote:
>
> I hope to enjoy code exploring.
> And , is there such kind of site?
> I found some wiki-base site.
> eg) http://en.literateprograms.org/LiteratePrograms:Welcome

There's also PLEAC:

http://pleac.sourceforge.net/

I seem to remember someone talking about contributing.

Derek

Copyright © 2012 École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland