tengo
OK
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tengo
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Making Games in Go for Absolute Beginners
> It also has a bunch of libraries for embedding scripting languages https://awesome-go.com/embeddable-scripting-languages, with Tengo _probably_ being the quickest https://github.com/d5/tengo
Yes, I noticed those packages recently. The problem is that there is little data about how reliable and maintainable goloader is going to be on the long term.
As I care about performance and security, I don't want a scripting language, but WASM seems to be a very promising possibility. I have made benchmarks with 2~3 WASM engines in Go, and so far I am not completely convinced about the quality and performance of the available APIs. Also, when compiling Golang to WASM, the native compiler is still abysmally bad and does not have full support for imports, so Tinygo is a must-have.
Anyway, modding is still a long term idea at this point, so hopefully the ecosystem will get more mature within a couple of years.
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Looking for programming languages created with Go
- https://github.com/d5/tengo
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Change go code behaviour at runtime
There are totally different things like https://github.com/d5/tengo but I don't know much about the docs, communities, or viability of them. Some like this one look very active and healthy. It might be worth considering.
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Asking for advice to get deeper understanding of golang internals.
I started doing this a few years ago when I wanted to add programmability to another system I was working on, and didn't want Lua or anything else like that. I set it aside when other priorities arose, and didn't return to it when I saw that others had already done the same thing (yaegi, tengo).
OK
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Looking for programming languages created with Go
- https://github.com/jesseduffield/OK
- [humour/satire] Just came across the "OK?" language, thought people here might appreciate it ."OK?s mission is to do away with the needless complexity of today's programming languages and let you focus on what matters".
- [RE: ternary operator] Disgusting, we agree. Einstein, Tesla, and Newton all died long ago, so there's really only a handful of humans left on Earth who are capable of parsing that stupifying syntax. What does the question mark mean? What does the colon mean?
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The OK? Programming Language
I'm not certain, but this first example seems like they are joking: https://github.com/jesseduffield/OK#conditionals
Does anyone find the C ternary operator conditional expression hard to read?
And, in Lisps, all conditionals are expression special forms (there's no distinction between statements and expressions like in C), so it's even more comfortable there:
(if isprod "prod" "dev")
- "You shouldn't need to use juvenile word separators like underscores or camelCase because if you can't capture the meaning of a variable in a single word, that's a sign that you need to refactor."
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Go'ing Insane Part Two: Partial Privacy
Your OK? language is brilliant. Our codebase rewrite is underway.
- OK? Programming Made Simple Again
What are some alternatives?
otto - A JavaScript interpreter in Go (golang)
automod - Pull in every source file in a directory as a module
gopher-lua - GopherLua: VM and compiler for Lua in Go
vigil - Vigil, the eternal morally vigilant programming language
goja - ECMAScript/JavaScript engine in pure Go
comet - A programming language implementation in Go.
expr - Expression language and expression evaluation for Go [Moved to: https://github.com/expr-lang/expr]
gojq - Pure Go implementation of jq
go-php - PHP bindings for the Go programming language (Golang)
rye - homoiconic dynamic programming language with some new ideas
go-lua - A Lua VM in Go
slurp - Slurp is a highly customisable LISP toolkit for Go applications. 💻