bread VS pika

Compare bread vs pika and see what are their differences.

bread

An expression based scripting language (by sam-barr)

pika

A WIP little dependently-typed systems language (by naalit)
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bread pika
1 4
5 35
- -
0.0 7.1
over 1 year ago 27 days ago
C Rust
MIT License GNU General Public License v3.0 or later
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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.

bread

Posts with mentions or reviews of bread. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-02-01.
  • February 2021 monthly "What are you working on?" thread
    16 projects | /r/ProgrammingLanguages | 1 Feb 2021
    After several failed projects, I finally started work on (and have made a lot of progress on) a programming language project that I'm really happy with. My language bread is an expression based, dynamically typed, object oriented language scripting language. When I learned rust, I was particularly excited by the idea of having if-expressions (rather than if-statements) in an imperative language. I went with that idea, and made a language where pretty much everything (function definitions, loops, class definitions) is an expression. I'm not sure how useful the language is, but it's been a lot of fun to write and hopefully I'll find some use for it.

pika

Posts with mentions or reviews of pika. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-09-01.
  • September 2021 monthly "What are you working on?" thread
    8 projects | /r/ProgrammingLanguages | 1 Sep 2021
    I just switched Pika to using significant indentation. This is mostly because of how annoying line continuation is in a ML-style language (so f a b syntax) without significant indentation or required semicolons, but you can read more about the reasons for that decision in this section of the README.
  • May 2021 monthly "What are you working on?" thread
    11 projects | /r/ProgrammingLanguages | 1 May 2021
    Recently, I've been working on adding garbage collection to Pika. I've successfully written an Immix-based garbage collector that works with the LLVM GC support infrastructure, and I'm currently working on integrating the GC with Pika, or really Durin, the dependently-typed intermediate representation that Pika compiles to. Because types are passed around at runtime, objects of unknown type and size can be stored unboxed in polymorphic data structures; but that makes keeping track of type information for heap allocations somewhat harder, because type information needs to be allocated and constructed at runtime in some cases. It's an interesting design problem, because you want constructing type information to be fast; but the GC will run much more often, so maximizing tracing speed by avoiding e.g. indirection in type information is important; and you also want to construct as much type information as possible at compile time and embed it as constants.
  • March 2021 monthly "What are you working on?" thread
    16 projects | /r/ProgrammingLanguages | 6 Mar 2021
    I've been working on adding algebraic effects to Pika during the past month. It's turned out to be harder than I thought it would, but I'm almost done - performing and catching one effect at a time works, and the compilation strategy I'm using now (I reimplemented the whole thing after realizing the strategy I was using wouldn't actually work) should be enough to handle multiple effects at once and also effect polymorphism, I just have to get those working in the elaborator.
  • February 2021 monthly "What are you working on?" thread
    16 projects | /r/ProgrammingLanguages | 1 Feb 2021
    After taking a break from Pika, my dependently-typed ML for systems programming, during the month of January, I've started working on it again by getting recursion to work properly. I'm planning on starting to implement algebraic effects next, and an Immix-based garbage collector for boxed values after that. Here's what my current plan for algebraic effects looks like:

What are some alternatives?

When comparing bread and pika you can also consider the following projects:

lisp - A lisp JIT compiler and interpreter built with cranelift.

konna - A fast functional language based on two level type theory

Foray - A concatenative language written in Zig

durin - the Dependent Unboxed higher-oRder Intermediate Notation

rumi - The rumi compiler

bluebird - A work-in-progess programming language modeled after Ada and C++

lang - A toy language I'm making in my spare time.

Ameyo - Habit + task tracking Chrome extension built with React, Typescript, SCSS, Express, MongoDB, Firebase, + Jest

starlight - JS engine in Rust

stonks

c3c - Compiler for the C3 language