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diff --git a/docs/implementation/kclaims.html b/docs/implementation/kclaims.html index 667ff0fa..4d028e6c 100644 --- a/docs/implementation/kclaims.html +++ b/docs/implementation/kclaims.html @@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ <link href="../style.css" rel="stylesheet"/> <title>BQN: Wild claims about K performance</title> </head> -<div class="nav"><a href="https://github.com/mlochbaum/BQN">BQN</a> / <a href="../index.html">main</a> / <a href="index.html">implementation</a></div> +<div class="nav">(<a href="https://github.com/mlochbaum/BQN">github</a>) / <a href="../index.html">BQN</a> / <a href="index.html">implementation</a></div> <h1 id="wild-claims-about-k-performance">Wild claims about K performance</h1> <p>Sometimes I see unsourced, unclear, vaguely mystical claims about K being the fastest array language. It happens often enough that I'd like to write a long-form rebuttal to these, and a demand that the people who make these do more to justify them.</p> <p>This isn't meant to put down the K language! K is in fact the only APL-family language other than BQN that I would recommend without reservations. And there's nothing wrong with the K community as a whole. Go to <a href="https://chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/90748/the-k-tree">the k tree</a> and meet them! What I want to fight is the <em>myth</em> of K, which is carried around as much by those who used K once upon a time, and no longer have any connection to it, as by active users.</p> |
