i2c_hackery
ponyc
i2c_hackery | ponyc | |
---|---|---|
1 | 65 | |
0 | 5,764 | |
- | 0.6% | |
0.0 | 9.1 | |
over 3 years ago | 4 days ago | |
Rust | C | |
- | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License |
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i2c_hackery
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There are a *lot* of actor framework projects on Cargo.
Does that one even count, in the absence of some sort of macro to write all the boilerplate? ;)
ponyc
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Thinking in Actors – Part 3 – Using the Actor Model to Track Aircraft
Actors immediately made me think of Pony. https://www.ponylang.io
- Pony (Programming Language)
- Firewalling Your Code
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Multitasking, parallel processing, and concurrency in Swift
Or give up and erase all the type information by saying `throws Exception` or `throws Throwable`.
Genericizing throws in particular was tried in Midori [2] and worked out really well (by report). In addition, several less-than-completely-obscure languages are starting to experiment with the algebra of effects in general (as opposed to error handling in particular). Pony (https://www.ponylang.io/), OCaml (https://ocaml.org/manual/5.2/effects.html) and others are experimenting with bringing what Koka (among others; https://koka-lang.github.io/koka/doc/index.html) to the masses.
[1]: https://www.artima.com/articles/the-trouble-with-checked-exc...
- Old Version
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The problem with general purpose programming languages
For example, the actor's model is not used by a lot of languages, Pony (https://www.ponylang.io/) and Elixir are the only ones that I know, but they address the concurrency problem quite well, while it's a pain to deal with in other languages at large scale.
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Found a language in development called Vale which claims to be the safest AOT compiled language in the World (Claims to beSafer than Rust)
And that last point is critical. If the language flatly can't represent some concepts it uses, they have to be implemented somewhere else. I had a similar discussion with a proponent for Pony once- the language itself is 100% safe, and fully dependent on C for its runtime and data structures. One of Rust's core strengths is being able to express unsafe concepts, meaning the unsafe code can expose a safe interface that accurately describes its requirements rather than an opaque C ABI. Vale doesn't seem to do that.
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The Rust I wanted had no future
"Exterior iteration. Iteration used to be by stack / non-escaping coroutines, which we also called "interior" iteration, as opposed to "exterior" iteration by pointer-like things that live in variables you advance. Such coroutines are now finally supported by LLVM (they weren't at the time) and are actually a fairly old and reliable mechanism for a linking-friendly, not-having-to-inline-tons-of-library-code abstraction for iteration. They're in, like, BLISS and Modula-2 and such. Really normal thing to have, early Rust had them, and they got ripped out for a bunch of reasons that, again, mostly just form "an argument I lost" rather than anything I disagree with today. I wish Rust still had them. Maybe someday it will!"
I remember that one. The change was shortly after I started fooling with Rust and was major. Major as in it broke all the code that I'd written to that point.
"Async/await. I wanted a standard green-thread runtime with growable stacks -- essentially just "coroutines that escape, when you need them too"."
I remember that one, too; it was one of the things that drew me to the language---I was imagining something more like Pony (https://www.ponylang.io/).
"The Rust I Wanted probably had no future, or at least not one anywhere near as good as The Rust We Got."
Almost certainly true. But The Rust We Got is A Better C++, which was never appealing to me because I never liked C++ anyway.
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How long until Rust becomes mandatory, and use of any other language opens the developer up to Reckless Endangerment charges
Pony or bust.
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Universal parameter passing semantics
If you have a value in mutable storage, and want to treat it as an immutable parameter without copying it first, you will need to provide some way to guarantee that it won't be mutated while being treated as immutable! There doesn't seem to be a definitive best way to do that (although the likes of Pony make a try at it).
What are some alternatives?
uppercut - Small and simple actor model implementation.
gleam - ⭐️ A friendly language for building type-safe, scalable systems!
component - Managed lifecycle of stateful objects in Clojure
Halide - a language for fast, portable data-parallel computation
lucet - Lucet, the Sandboxing WebAssembly Compiler.
tab-rs - The intuitive, config-driven terminal multiplexer designed for software & systems engineers
ponyarchive - A wrapper for libarchive for Pony
Celluloid - Actor-based concurrent object framework for Ruby
prolog-to-minizinc - A Prolog-to-MiniZinc translator
specs - Specs - Parallel ECS
Phoenix - wxPython's Project Phoenix. A new implementation of wxPython, better, stronger, faster than he was before.