Diagnostics Factory
Zigの強く型付けされたエラーコードはエラー処理の半分を解決しますが、残りの報告部分はユーザーに委ねられます。本記事では、ユーザーに役立つエラーメッセージを表示するための著者の個人的なデフォルトアプローチについて説明します。
Zigの強く型付けされたエラーコードはエラー処理の半分を解決しますが、残りの報告部分はユーザーに委ねられます。本記事では、ユーザーに役立つエラーメッセージを表示するための著者の個人的なデフォルトアプローチについて説明します。
Zig's strict anti-LLM contribution policy (banning LLM use for issues, PRs, and comments) is rooted in valuing long-term human contributors over code. Loris Cro explains that reviewing LLM-written PRs does not help grow new trusted project members. As a consequence, Bun—a major Zig-based project—will not upstream performance improvements due to this ban.
Zed is a font superfamily designed for reader needs, tested with visually impaired patients where it outperformed Helvetica in reading speed. It includes Text and Display optical versions, supports 547 languages, and offers variable axes for width, weight, roundness, and slant.
Zig creator Andrew Kelley argues that it's a misconception people can't tell who is using LLMs, claiming LLM hallucinations differ fundamentally from human mistakes and that frequent agentic-coded contributors have a noticeable "digital smell." He compares it to smokers entering a room and states his project will not accept LLM-assisted contributions.
Zed is a type system designed for optimal readability, tested with visually impaired patients where it outperformed Helvetica in reading speed. It comes in Text and Display optical versions with four variable axes and supports 547 languages.
The Zig programming language project has adopted a strict anti-AI policy for contributions, requiring all code, comments, and documentation to be human-authored without assistance from AI tools. The project's rationale includes concerns about copyright, code quality, and maintaining a human-centric development culture.