book
elmish
book | elmish | |
---|---|---|
18 | 14 | |
1,160 | 816 | |
0.4% | 1.1% | |
2.7 | 4.4 | |
3 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
OCaml | F# | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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book
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OCaml: a Rust developer's first impressions
Some of your questions might be answered in this book (free online version): https://dev.realworldocaml.org/
- Compiler Development: Rust or OCaml?
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Nix-Powered Development with OCaml
I don't think they're wrong
the Jane Street side are quite prolific with blog posts etc
as a newcomer to OCaml one of the first, and nicer-looking, intro resources you'll likely encounter is the Real World OCaml book https://dev.realworldocaml.org/ which unfortunately does everything using Base instead of the stdlib
Personally that didn't sit right to me and I prefer to use the stdlib by default (which seems fine and not in need of a wholesale replacement)
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Comparing Objective Caml and Standard ML
This is an oldie but a goodie.
OCaml has, unlike Standard ML, grown quite a lot since this page was made.
In particular, the section "Standard libraries", I'd recommend looking at:
https://dev.realworldocaml.org/
A couple of places where the comparison is outdated:
- OCaml using Base [1] allows for result-type oriented programming
- OCaml using Base uses less language magic and more module system
While there was and is truth to the distinction that SML is for scientists and OCaml is for engineers, this dichotomy is getting dated: OCaml is under active development, which means that scientists who want better tooling will choose OCaml. For example, 1ML [2] by Andreas Rossberg was built in OCaml.
[1]: https://opensource.janestreet.com/base/
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Resource recommendations for a beginner.
Real World OCaml (version 2 is finally out) is also pretty good.
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OCAML HELP!
Real World OCaml is also a good resource, geared more towards people who already have some programming experience and want a more industry/practical focused learning experience.
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Teach Yourself Programming in Ten Years
ocaml.org’s new website is packed with lots of great early intros.
most learners eventually gravitate towards Real World OCaml https://dev.realworldocaml.org/ for additional learning.
Unfortunately, the learning resources for different domains out there isn’t as highly curated or prolific as, say, rust. If you do web dev like me, it takes a bit more work to find the tools and put them together. But the language itself lends itself well to systems level programming.
Fortunately, the forum is a great help.
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Help getting started with Ocaml
In general, better read the second edition which is updated to use current Core versions. A print version was published recently.
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learning ocaml this semester.
I recommend https://dev.realworldocaml.org/ and https://cs3110.github.io/textbook/cover.html
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Functional Reactive Programming
Elm is not dead. It just prefers a slow release schedule but is still actively worked on in the background.
That said, you might want to check out OCaml for general purpose programming. Super fast compiler, great performance, can target both native and JS.
It is easier to use than Haskell due to defaulting to eager evaluation (like most languages) strategy instead of laziness and being generally more pragmatic, offering more escape hatches into the imperative world if need be. Plus great upward trajectory with lot's of cool stuff like an effects system and multi-core support coming.
Real World Ocaml is a decent resource: https://dev.realworldocaml.org/
elmish
- A new F# compiler feature: graph-based type-checking
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ASP.NET Core Blazor
For those interested in .NET languages with alternative compilation targets, Elmish (https://elmish.github.io/elmish/) is pretty unique.
We use F# on the front end (instead of TS), and thanks to the Fable compiler (which transpiles F# to JS, Python, Dart, PHP and Rust), most of the benefits of an Elm-style model in the UI can be ported to all sorts of different outputs languages. The rust target is in beta, but its promising because the WASM bundle size stands to be dramatically lower.
While the default is reactivity library for Elmish is React, you can swap in Avalonia/FuncUI (https://github.com/fsprojects/Avalonia.FuncUI) pretty easily as well.
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Building React Components Using Unions in TypeScript
Naturally I’d recommend using a better language such as ReScript or Elm or PureScript or F#‘s Fable + Elmish, but “React” is the king right now and people perceive TypeScript as “less risky” for jobs/hiring, so here we are.
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F(#)ront-end Experience like Re-Frame (clojure(script))?
Since you're familiar with React + Reframe, you can try Elmish! You can use F# to write [Elmish](https://elmish.github.io/elmish/) apps. It takes the Elm approach to building apps.
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Produce what exactly?
Who’s paying for this? https://github.com/elmish/elmish
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Should I pick up OCaml or Haskell?
Try F# with Elmish.
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Functional Reactive Programming
Maybe elmish could be of interest to you? https://github.com/elmish/elmish
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Has TypeScript made you a better developer?
I never tried Elm directly, but I have used the F# equivalent Elmish - super productive idea.
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F# and WebAssembly
You can also get nested templates, bind inputs, and radios for example by the way don't be scared by the mutable keyword right there is just to show a brief example in a normal situation you would likely be using Elmish
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Managing State in Comet
Comet promotes a variation of the Model-View-Update pattern popularized by The Elm Architecture, Elmish, Fabulous and others. The major parts of MVU are:
What are some alternatives?
swift-async-algorithms - Async Algorithms for Swift
Feliz - A fresh retake of the React API in Fable and a collection of high-quality components to build React applications in F#, optimized for happiness
awesome-ocaml - A curated collection of awesome OCaml tools, frameworks, libraries and articles.
type-challenges - Collection of TypeScript type challenges with online judge
reason - Simple, fast & type safe code that leverages the JavaScript & OCaml ecosystems
Fable: F# |> BABEL - F# to JavaScript, TypeScript, Python, Rust and Dart Compiler
learn-you-a-haskell - “Learn You a Haskell for Great Good!” by Miran Lipovača
Sutil - Lightweight front-end framework for F# / Fable. No dependencies.
ocaml-containers - A lightweight, modular standard library extension, string library, and interfaces to various libraries (unix, threads, etc.) BSD license.
Bolero - Bolero brings Blazor to F# developers with an easy to use Model-View-Update architecture, HTML combinators, hot reloaded templates, type-safe endpoints, advanced routing and remoting capabilities, and more.
onelinerizer - Shamelessly convert any Python 2 script into a terrible single line of code
ionide-vscode-fsharp - VS Code plugin for F# development