Thanks to your article I just realised my HTML entity codec library doesn't support decoding those named entities that can omit the semicolon at the end. More work for me, good thing my summer vacation just started! :)
This might not get a lot of traction because it's very technical, but i wanted to say a massive well done for the effort. 20k words on anything this specific is not a joke. I wish i would put this level of commitment to anything in life, this was inspiring if nothing else.
Appreciate it (I'm the author). I'd like to think there's a good bit of interesting stuff in here outside of the specific topic of named character reference tokenization.
Thanks to your article I just realised my HTML entity codec library doesn't support decoding those named entities that can omit the semicolon at the end. More work for me, good thing my summer vacation just started! :)
This might not get a lot of traction because it's very technical, but i wanted to say a massive well done for the effort. 20k words on anything this specific is not a joke. I wish i would put this level of commitment to anything in life, this was inspiring if nothing else.
Appreciate it (I'm the author). I'd like to think there's a good bit of interesting stuff in here outside of the specific topic of named character reference tokenization.
"no[t] a 'data structures' person"
says the person who wrote an extremely technical 20k word blog post on data structures! <3
Congratulations on your newfound promotion to data structures person btw