pocl
minchat
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pocl
- Tree-shaking, the horticulturally misguided algorithm
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Web bloat impacts users with slow devices
https://github.com/avodonosov/pocl
The unused javascript code can be removed (and loaded on demand). Although I am not sure how valuable that would be for the world. It only saves network traffic, parsing time and some browser memory for compiled code. But js traffic in the Internet is neglidgible comparing to, say, video and images. Will the user experience be signifiqanty better if browser is the saved from the unnesessary js parsing? I don't know of a good way to measure that.
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Red and blue functions are a good thing
> for such a small piece of work
Don't take the example too literally, some functions calls can be here.
Running computations in parallel is often valuable. Or run computations in parallel with waiting for external resource - why does not the code in the article compute something while waiting for a, b and c?
Anyways, if async functions are so good, why not have all functions async?
The article says this a kind of "documentation" that tells you what functions can wait for some external data and what functions are "pure computation". If it was so, it would be OK. Such a documentation could be computed automatically based on the called function implementations and developer is hinted: "these two functions you call are both async, consider waiting for both in parallel". In reality, the async / await implementations prevent the non-async functions from becoming async without code change and rebuild. This restriction is just a limitation of how async / await is implemented, not something useful.
As other commenter says, the article "embraces a defect introduced for BC reasons as if it's sound engineering. It really isn't."
When my code is called by a 3rd party library, I can not change my code to async. That's the most unpleasant property of today's async / await. What yesterday was quick computation tomorrow can become a network call. For example, I may want to bodies of rarely used functions to only load when called first time (https://github.com/avodonosov/pocl).
The article suggest we have to decide upfront, at the top-level of the application / call stack, which parts can be implemented with as waiting blocks and which should never wait for anything external. This is not practical.
> It's almost always faster to do them in parallel if possible.
minchat
What are some alternatives?
unison - A friendly programming language from the future
lawvere - A categorical programming language with effects