codex
python programming
Black Hat Python: Python Programming for Hackers and Pentesters
Author: Justin Seitz
Year: 2014
View Bookjavascript web development
Build Applications with Meteor: Isomorphic JavaScript web development
Author: Dobrin Ganev
Year: 2017
View BookIsomorphic JavaScript Web Development: Universal JavaScript with React and Node
Author: Tomas Alabes
Year: 2017
View BookProgramming the Web Using Xhtml and Javascript (Web Developer Series)
Author: Larry Randles Lagerstrom
Year: 2002
View Bookjava software engineering
Java Software Engineer RED-HOT Career Guide; 2505 REAL Interview Questions
Author: Red-Hot Careers
Year: 2018
View BookObjectoriented Software Engineering Using UML Patterns and Java
Author: Allen H. Dutoit
Year: 2009
View BookClassical and object-oriented software engineering with UML and Java
Author: Stephen R. Schach
Year: 1999
View Bookc++ systems programming
Advances in Computers, Volume 49 (Advances in Computers)
Author: Marvin V. Zelkowitz
Year: 1995
View Bookc# .NET development
Advances in Computers, Volume 49 (Advances in Computers)
Author: Marvin V. Zelkowitz
Year: 1995
View Bookrust language
Rust Programming, in 8 Hours, for Beginners, Quick Start Guide
Author: Dart R. Swift
Year: 2022
View BookThe Rust Programming Language (Covers Rust 2018)
Author: Steve Klabnik, Carol Nichols
Year: 2019
View Bookhtml css
From cuneiform to computation
Beneath every keystroke lies a lineage. The Codex at Scrolls.blog is a growing archive tracing the arc of human expression — from the earliest etched tablets of Mesopotamia to the evolving syntax of modern code. Here, the ancient and the algorithmic are not opposed, but intertwined — a repository where language remembers itself.
In the coming weeks, this space will expand into a curated library of ancient scripts, linguistic histories, programming paradigms, and experimental code. Whether you’re seeking sacred texts, research tools, or languages that stretch the bounds of imagination, the Codex is where past and future converge. Expect more scrolls — some rediscovered, others newly written in the logic of machines.
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