ante | doc | |
---|---|---|
23 | 14 | |
1,841 | 282 | |
- | 1.1% | |
8.0 | 9.2 | |
28 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Rust | Raku | |
MIT License | Artistic License 2.0 |
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Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
ante
- Dada, an Experiement by the Creators of Rust
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Graydon Hoare: Batten Down Fix Later
Have you had a look at Ante? It looks a lot like a Rust 2.0 with better ergonomics. There are a lot of interesting ideas.
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Why is there no simple C-like functional programming language?
Ante is what you are looking for. It's an ML descendant with no RTS nor AGC.
- Rust's Ugly Syntax
- Opinions on ante?
- Ante - A safe, easy systems language
- [User study] Interest in a Rust-like garbage-collected programming language?
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Cell Lang: Why yet another programming language?
In my experience, people believe that programming languages are a solved space, and we should stick with what we have.
It's unfortunate; because languages are very polarized today. I think there's a lot of room for languages that are safe, fast, and most importantly, *easy.* Today's languages are generally two out of three.
Luckily, a lot of languages are exploring that space!
* Vale is blending generational references with regions, to have memory-safe single ownership without garbage collection or a borrow checker. [0]
* Cone is adding a borrow checker on top of GC, RC, single ownership, and even custom user allocators. [1]
* Lobster found a way to add borrow-checker-like static analysis to reference counting. [2]
* HVM is using borrowing and cloning under the hood to make pure functional programming ridiculously fast. [3]
* Ante is using lifetime inference and algebraic effects to make programs faster and more flexible. [4]
* D is adding a borrow checker!
[0] https://verdagon.dev/blog/zero-cost-refs-regions
[1] https://cone.jondgoodwin.com/
[2] https://www.strlen.com/lobster/
[3] https://github.com/Kindelia/HVM
[4] https://antelang.org/
- Ante: A safe, easy, low-level functional language for exploring refinement types, lifetime inference, and other fun features.
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Not well known programming languages with interesting features?
[Ante](https://antelang.org/): lifetime inference, refinement types, algebraic effects.
doc
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The origin and virtues of semicolons in programming languages
* list of list literals (1,2; 3,4) eqv ((1,2), (3,4));
to paraphrase Larry Walk “everyone wants the [semi] colon”
https://docs.raku.org/
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Dada, an Experiement by the Creators of Rust
amen to this … i recommend thinking about your problem in terms of effective data structures and then apply even a very simple DSL to handle access and transformations … fwiw the built in Grammars and Slang support in raku https://docs.raku.org are fantastic tools for this job.
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Raku: A Language for Gremlins
When I was looking at the language, I didn't find the documentation "really poor". In fact I was impressed at how much of a one-stop-shop the official docs site was for both conceptual docs and API docs.
https://docs.raku.org/
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Migrating Perl to Raku
The Raku Programming Language documentation already contains most (if not all) the documentation you need to deal with the issues you will confront in migrating Perl code to Raku. But, as documentation goes, the focus is on the factual differences. These blogs will try to go a little more in-depth about specific issues and provide a little more hands-on information based on my experience porting quite a lot of Perl code to Raku.
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Introducing Pod Renewal Initiative
I will start working on the new version of Pod as a branch in https://github.com/raku/doc.
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Will Carbon Replace C++?
Well, performance has been improved by several orders of magnitude since the first release. So maybe it's time to look at https://raku.org again (or first have a look at its new documentation site https://docs.raku.org)
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What do yall use raku for?
go to https://docs.raku.org/ and type "IO" into the search field. Behold the list that appears. Check out IO::Path or IO::Handle or whatever looks interesting. Maybe it's just me but I go "Ooh, look at all the things!".
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Generating a hash without a helper function
Related: The Raku documentation does an excellent job explaining hashes/dictrionaries/associative arrays. If you've any issues, please submit a Github issue.
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What are the best materials for learning raku?
Raku has a lot of syntax. My first attempt at learning the language failed because I couldn't get past all the strange syntax I saw at https://docs.raku.org/. Sometimes I didn't know what the syntax was called, so I didn't know what to search for.
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2021 Advent of Code solutions in the Raku programming language
In the course of figuring this out, I realized that our docs also (slightly) misstate what \d means in a Regex, which led to this PR. So thanks for bringing all this up!
What are some alternatives?
riju - ⚡ Extremely fast online playground for every programming language.
advent - Contains all data relating to the annual Raku Advent event held 1-25 December
FStar - A Proof-oriented Programming Language
problem-specifications - Shared metadata for exercism exercises.
verona - Research programming language for concurrent ownership
sparrowdo - Run Sparrow tasks remotely
blazex - AOT compiled object oriented programming language
advent-of-raku-2020 - Advent of Code solutions in the Raku programming language
duck-editor - 基于scheme开发的鸭子编辑器
rakudo - 🦋 Rakudo – Raku on MoarVM, JVM, and JS
azula - A fast, statically typed compiled language
advent-of-raku-2021 - 2021 Advent of Code solutions in the Raku programming language