70 Comments
- Virak, on 10/12/2007, -0/+26Finally, an easy way to search open source code for dirty words.
- Snakedal337, on 10/12/2007, -0/+12{*****($t[$k]['childNodes']
Oh dear :-(...***** childnodes..this cannot be christan
Hehe - t1tan, on 10/12/2007, -0/+9search trough code of the hosted projects is indeed a very cool feature. It's very useful when you want to nail down one method's usage and you don't know exactly what you need to provide (other calls and preparations) to get the desired result
- inactive, on 10/12/2007, -1/+8It won't be long before they are affiliated with or sponsored by Google. Maybe even owned (no, no pwn3d).
- btipling, on 10/12/2007, -0/+7A search engine with a name anywhere nearly remotely resemblig 'google' is asking for legal trouble.
- pufuwozu, on 10/12/2007, -2/+9@aznron911:
Outputs a character to the console that causes the computer to beep. - mogwhy, on 10/12/2007, -6/+12That may crash with a stack overflow... try this:
void main() {
while(true) {
printf("[backslash]a");
}
} - Pile, on 10/12/2007, -0/+6ROFL.. do a search on motherf**ker - it's pretty interesting how that word can be used in so many ways...
- neko, on 10/12/2007, -0/+6Cool.
Now maybe SCO can finally find that nasty evil bit of whitespace that was copied off them. - dacheetah, on 10/12/2007, -0/+4"Code Files 1-10 (out of about 3510 matching files)"
There are actually some rather interesting uses for a certain word beginning with "F". The boring ones include hard coded "Bad Words" filters, but some of them are more interesting. - pucosk, on 10/12/2007, -0/+4@tonyr1988: Praising AJAX and pointing out that the site doesn't work without JS is completely valid. I mean shouldn't AJAX websites degrade gracefully when they don't have JS enabled/supported. This has to be a big turnoff, how am I supposed to use this with Opera/FF keywords when it doesn't read a stupid querystring but relies only on JS.
- Pile, on 10/12/2007, -0/+4This search engine isn't that useful. I searched on C code and got C++, and a common routine I was looking for, the code returned really didn't have much to do with it, and the code results are little pieces of larger projects outside of the original context.
I don't see this site being useful if you're looking for code libraries or specific routines. It's main usefulness may be to search to find examples of certain types of routines. But as a search engine for finding code to incorporate into other applications, I don't think it can cut it. - verifex, on 10/12/2007, -1/+4Oh man, another code search engine to pile on the top of the many I already have. This one is cool though, I like the ajax loading stuff. Now someone needs to build a metasearch for all the code searching websites lol!
- xorian, on 10/12/2007, -0/+3I was a beta tester of Krugle some time ago. They sure changed a lot. Unfortunately, the results aren't always (or as in, often) not exactly what I'm looking for. But I'm sure that when the usage increases, the results will improve.
- haackers, on 10/12/2007, -1/+4I agree this search is cool for programmers who want to search through code in hosted projects. I also like the name Krugle.
- tonyr1988, on 10/12/2007, -1/+3I'm not so sure about the legal problems of Krugle. The ONLY resemblance of Google and Krugle is pronunciation. Krugle could easily be said either as "KR-EW-GUL" (sounds like Google) or "KR-UH-GUL" (nothing at all like Google).
Looking at past search engines sued by Google over names, they almost all end with "oogle", which has no alternate pronunciation. Seeing as there are no spelling similarities between Krugle and Google, (except for the common endng "gle"), the lawsuit isn't as strong as other search engines.
Then again, IANAL. - electrichead, on 10/12/2007, -0/+2What a non sequitur. But you are correct, both the text logo and the phallic feather are pretty bad. I had to google 'lucene':
http://lucene.apache.org/java/docs/ - Obsidian743, on 10/12/2007, -3/+5Needs JavaScript? Oh boo-hoo. Welcome to the twenty-first ***** century and the interweb.
- klepto, on 10/12/2007, -1/+3www.koders.com is the best.
- fatas, on 10/12/2007, -0/+2lol no VB.net
- actionscripted, on 10/12/2007, -0/+2Or BASIC... :)
- Spuby, on 10/12/2007, -0/+2Yeah, it works nice. I think it was covered before too (?)http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&q=%22krugle%22+site%3Adigg.com
- vbsurfer, on 10/12/2007, -0/+2I see the suffix -gle is getting popular these days.
- adam.skinner, on 10/12/2007, -1/+3Perhaps a more appropriate name would have been "kludgle".
- Kailash.Nadh, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1Wasn't this already posted here? Anyway, Krugle's alright.
- GreenLantern33, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1No ASP? :(
- Beacon, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1Anyone unaware of the existing search engines on the web is obviously not a programmer and doesn't need such engines pointed out to them.
The search feature uses tabs for browsing, though, so I dugg it for that. Flashy, but cool. - kamiller42, on 10/12/2007, -2/+3As a programmer, I do not find this to be the ultimate search engine. It does not offer Delphi (Object Pascal) as a language option. Maybe in Krugle 2.0. Till then, Google works.
- zcreem, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1Fair comment but I see you get dugg down because you dare to use Delphi and mention a language that most of the children on this site will never have heard of yet alone used, Turbo Pascal was so good, and its' child Delphi is still a far better language than anything MS has come up with.
- benhocking, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1I tried a couple of Ruby searches and had some good hits. I then tried it with a C++ question I had earlier in the week, and it was a little less helpful. However, I suspect that this might be related to familiarity. I.e., my C++ question was a little more complex (because I'm more familiar with it) than my Ruby question. OTOH, familiarity with Krugle might allow you to do the more complex searches, just like familiarity with Google allows you to be a more powerful user.
- bart9h, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1The ultimate search engine is avaiable for 10 YEARS now:
http://www.cpan.org/ - quasipalm, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1I haven't had much luck with this -- has anyone else? And I don't see Google paying for something they could probably write in a long weekend. It's not like they need help in the search space.
Try this: Search for "merge sort source c" on google and you'll get lots of code. Search for "merge sort" on krugle, and you get a lot of code that doesn't seem to be implementations of merge sort.
I like the idea behind http://www.codecodex.com/ a sort of Wikipedia for code better. It could use more content at the time being though. - geezusfreeek, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1Really cool. I just wish that I could capture the search field into Opera's search bar, but since it's all AJAXy and stuff, it doesn't work.
- yumptou, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1Has anyone noticed the tabs in the search results? Click on a few results, and see that they are opened within the search engine. I would like that if they didn't block middle clicking.
- yahoofrom, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1including "gogle"?
- zcreem, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1Blind, deaf, physically disabled, Java script adds real usability features, not.
Welcome to the "inter-web", oh! grow up, no wonder have the net is full of spam bots Trojans etc. if you choose to have sex without protection don't cry when you bits start itching in a few days.
As for definitions, thanks but I do no the meaning of this silly acronym and many others too. Just because someone strung together a cool sound name using the letters from a Greek god doesn't make it necessarily cool or useful.
Again it isn't like Google because Google works perfectly without java script, and so is accessible to all browser users.
MTV programming for the MTV generation; content no, make it cool. - Twango, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1Including 'goggle'? 'Ogle'?
- kweee, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1Yup, they'll be getting a cease & desist letter any day now. How unfortunate.
- xotx69, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1Nice site. Very handy when you forget some syntax and just want an example to get you started
- zcreem, on 10/12/2007, -5/+6Not like Google at all, this need Javascript.
While I like some of the nice things Ajax can offer like on this site, why should I require it just to view a site, let alone search on a search portal.
Let me know when the frontpage at least is Open Browser. - amed, on 10/12/2007, -1/+2how do you pronounce krugle? I don't have quick time and im too lazy to download it. why can't people use Flash like everyone else ????/
Viva la Flash, die with the rest.
anyhows, krugle sounds like a big security risk. sharing code, having it run through search engine and publicly displaying is not a good security measure - meddey, on 10/12/2007, -0/+0So how is this different from koders.com? Krugle has broken links, Koders has IDE plugins that work beautifully with Eclipse and Visual Studio. Meh...not news, olds!
- Pushkin, on 10/12/2007, -0/+0Thanks for the link to koders.com - although an option to deduplicate would be good.
- markm, on 10/12/2007, -0/+0Not bad. It ignored the $ sign in my $F() search
- aplusplus, on 10/12/2007, -2/+2Great little tool, been looking for something like this & I'm definitely digging this unique search interface / design.
- yahoofrom, on 10/12/2007, -1/+1the output is
[backslash]a[backslash]a[backslash]a[backslash]a[backslash]a[backslash]a[backslash]a[backslash]a[backslash]a[backslash]a[backslash]a[backslash]a
/ sarcasm - apocalypse917, on 10/12/2007, -0/+0This is a great site...I also like how you can submit your own projects into the site
- mrayyan, on 10/12/2007, -0/+0I like it
- nahant, on 10/12/2007, -0/+0People should check out www.ucodit.com as well. It has a cool interface and delivers code implementations with accuracy.
- blindlizard, on 10/12/2007, -1/+1Looks like the Visual Basic selection is only VB.Net, no VB6 or any other basic variant.
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