vascorsd, to FunctionalProgramming
@vascorsd@mastodon.social avatar

Flatmaps and do-notation, but different >.>


Functional Semantics in Imperative Clothing - https://rtfeldman.com/imperative-clothing

#fp #roclang #functionalProgramming

janriemer, (edited ) to roc

Oh nice, the now has a polished website! :awesome: 💅

https://www.roc-lang.org/

My is: we'll see a v0.1 release in a year or so. 🤞

Definitely a language I'm going to learn!

rustnl, to rust
@rustnl@fosstodon.org avatar

"10x faster - taking charge of the compiler backend"

Folkert de Vries talking about the future of compilers, and his aspirations for the Rust compiler. Can we be 10x faster?

#rustlang #rocLang

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCVfofYsWHU

macleod, to haskell

Various thoughts on too many programming languages, for no discernible reason.

I have been interested in Go since it's very initial release, but their dependence on Google is uncharming to say the least. I still haven't made up my mind on its GC, but its definitely better than most.

I used to do some ML work in .NET and if it wasn't dependent on Microsoft it would be a heavy contender for a great language, but it has far too many Microsoft-isms to ever really go much farther.

Rust is great, I enjoy beating my head against a brick wall battling with the compiler, and their safety is great, but overly complicated and feature-creep is a real problem on that entire project. I do a lot of work these days in Rust, for better (mostly) or worse (mostly-ish).

C is my bread-and-butter, as is Javascript for quick prototyping.

Elixir is great, but Erlang is unwieldy, the community is growing, but not fast enough - and I just can't get my mind to enjoy the syntax no matter how nice it is.

D is a lot of fun, but their GC can be slow at times, and the community is very small and packages are often broken and unmaintained.

Python was my first true love, but I really can't stand the whitespace, again love the language, hate the syntax.

Zig is fun, but just that. Fast, nimble, but early days, a bit confusing, could replace my insistence on C for core projects, but again, early days. I love to use them as a compiler for C, much faster than the defaults on any of the others.

Odin is one I love to keep an eye on, I wish I could get behind using it for more things. When I first took notice ~4 years ago the documentation was a bit scattered, but it looks much better now. The developer behind it is incredibly cool, could be seen as the next Dennis Ritchie imo. Runes are dope. The syntax is by far my favourite.

Julia, I love Julia, but performance last I tested was a bit of a miss, and by miss, it required a decent chunk of compute for basics, but when you gave it the system to throttle, it would be insanely productive to write in. Javascript is something that I prototype even syscalls in, but Julia is just the same but much better and more productive (and less strange) in many regards. I am really hoping this takes over in the ML/Data world and just eats Python alive. I've heard there has been major work in the perf department, but I haven't had reason to try it out lately.

Ada, memory safety before Rust! Great language, especially for critical applications, decades of baggage (or wisdom), slow moving language, insanely stable, compilers are all mostly proprietary, job market is small, but well paid, great for robotics, defense, and space industry types, but the syntax is... rough. Someone should make a meta-language on top of Ada like Zig/Nim/Odin do for C, or Elixir does for Erlang.

The others: Carbon, haven't tried; Nim, prefer when they were "Nimrod" (cue Green Day), decent but not my style; Crystal, seems cool, but not for me; Scala, great FP language, but JVM; Haskell, I'm not a mathematician, but my mathematician friends love it. I see why, but not my thing as much as I love functional languages. I'll try it again, eventually. I did not learn Haskell a great good.

I tend to jump from language to language, trying everything out, it's fun and a total timesuck.

[ # ] :: #c #d

leobm,
@leobm@norden.social avatar

@marcuse1w @macleod If you like , is an option. With there is also a stable erlang backend. Or I find very exciting in the erlang world (erlang and Javascript backend). Otherwise you might also like (native and wasm backend) if you are generally into ML languages. I also think is an extremely nice language. I've never understood what many people have against the syntax. I find it extremely simple and beautiful. Well, I also like 😉

janriemer, to random

#Prediction: #RocLang will make purely functional programming languages mainstream and much more accessible.

https://www.roc-lang.org/

#ProgrammingLanguage #FunctionalProgramming #DX #DeveloperExperience

vascorsd,
@vascorsd@mastodon.social avatar
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