AlphaDev[1][2] seems to be the only project, in the news at least, that approaches low-level compilation research. And even there, you have only a small subset of optimization.
I've been trying to find the modern equivalent of that video, and nothing seemed to be good enough. Do you know of a good setup, preferably local and emacs-based?
I think it means that the opponent does not gain a strategic advantage from an exchange. You both have good enough positions and you are simply a pawn up.
The meal plan example may be able to go even forward, because I think ledger-cli can also track your calories and macro-nutrients, apart from the ingredients themselves. I meant to do a calorie counting system in ledger-cli for some time, but did not quite get to it.
I am not really sure if ledger-cli has any capacity to create compound units, so that if you say log that you have eaten one potato in ledger-cli, you would also have to manually log the calories and macro-nutrients of that potato unless you had kept a template for that potato's nutritional profile you could copy paste somewhere right? I suppose you might be able to make a "potato" ledger file with its associated nutrient profiles and just load it from a code block every time you eat one. Idk.
You're right, I should have mentioned org-babel as the closest thing to something that would work for me.
However, as soon as I start using noweb syntax for "out of order" programming, I stumble into long standing bugs (references are not always found, links in the tangled code are broken, detangling does not work, etc...)
We've heard some users using hard drives or networked FS and having performance issues. sqlite relies on mmap and random access of pages, which can suffer on higher latency drives
There are instructions on how to run the GUI from localhost, and the title and even the phrase that has the link to their own hosting tell you you can run it locally first.
It seems they are genuine, and they phrase it exactly as it is. The only thing I would have maybe wanted to see in the title is "open-source" or free software.