tzip VS juvix

Compare tzip vs juvix and see what are their differences.

juvix

Juvix empowers developers to write code in a high-level, functional language, compile it to gas-efficient output VM instructions, and formally verify the safety of their contracts prior to deployment and execution. (by anoma)
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tzip juvix
14 7
- 300
- -
- 9.5
- almost 2 years ago
Haskell
- GNU General Public License v3.0 only
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.

tzip

Posts with mentions or reviews of tzip. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-06-11.

juvix

Posts with mentions or reviews of juvix. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-10-03.
  • Ask HN: Who is hiring? (October 2022)
    13 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 3 Oct 2022
    Heliax | Multiple roles | REMOTE (+-2 hours from CEST ideal) | Full Time | https://heliax.dev/jobs#all-jobs

    Heliax is a public goods lab which was built on years of pioneering experience across distributed systems, programming language theory, and zero-knowledge cryptography. All our work is open-source. Examples of some of our projects are Namada (https://github.com/anoma/namada), a sovereign proof-of-stake blockchain; Juvix (https://github.com/anoma/juvix), an experimental programming language; and Taiga (https://github.com/anoma/taiga), a framework for generalized shielded state transitions.

    We are currently actively hiring for a number of positions, most notably Senior Rust Engineers, Senior Full Stack Engineers, and a Protocol Security Lead.

    For the Senior Rust Engineer position, we are looking for experienced Rust developers that are interested in applying novel research to create high-quality open-source technology and solve outstanding problems in the blockchain space. You'll be working on distributed ledger technology implemented in Rust, all the way up and down the stack from the P2P layer to consensus algorithms, smart contract systems, proof-of-stake incentive mechanisms, privacy-enhancing cryptographic components, and on-chain governance procedures.

    For the Senior Full Stack Engineer position, we are looking for either web developers with experience using TypeScript and other modern web frameworks or software developers who have experience with Rust. Some representative examples of features you’ll be working on in this role are: adding support for Ledger hardware wallet connectivity, support for generation and use of file-based keys, generation of shielded transactions using cryptographic libraries, display of any digital asset (including NFTs) and associated transaction history, and on-chain management of staking and governance. It's a plus if you've previously worked with WebAssembly.

    For the Protocol Security Lead, you'll be responsible for breaking protocols both in theory and practice in and outside the company, and assembling a team to help them do so. You'll receive a high degree of latitude and autonomy to prioritize tasks and search for the weakest links in complex systems in order to break them. The rough structure could be compared to Google Project Zero, but with a focus on cryptographic protocols & implementations instead of web technology writ large.

  • Ask HN: How to get a job as a compiler engineer?
    7 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 25 Aug 2022
    > What are the companies that do exciting stuff in compilers?

    Some companies solve problems that have a larger component of parsing and evaluating things.

    One example is Hasura's SQL-to-GraphQL layer: https://hasura.io/

    Another example is GitHub's CodeQL: https://github.com/github/codeql

    A third example -- I forget the name of the company -- parses Counter-Strike games real-time and restructures this data for better analytical introspection, e.g. for betting, time-scrollable replay, 2D rendering, etc. There appears to be a lot of hard-earned going from a stream of events monkey-patched over two decades, to a complete model of a game (who's on what team, who is dead, what round is this, etc.)

    Microsoft does a lot of interesting compiler-related stuff, too, of course.

    Then there's blockchain: A lot of programming-language enthusiasts have been employed to write VMs and DSLs to express safe application-level environments. An example is Anoma's Juvix: https://github.com/anoma/juvix

    A job I was looking at involved building a more programmatic interface to some legacy SCADA systems, i.e. make old factory monitoring systems interoperate via a DSL. The idea, I think, is to transform and manage the configuration files from a dynamic GUI system.

    tl;dr: If your main tool is a compiler, there are compiler problems everywhere.

  • Missing line in a smart contract leads to $10M hack
    3 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 16 May 2021
    https://juvix.org/ is looking rather nice but is still beta.
    3 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 16 May 2021
    I dont know how hard it would be to port it to other platforms. Different Virtual machine.

    Tezos uses a human readable stack based language as a low level represenation that is suited for formal proofs: https://tezos.gitlab.io/008/michelson.html

    If archetype depends on that then its going to be hard to port but i dont think it does.

    Another interesting project in development is https://juvix.org/ which targets more backends beside michelson like llvm and wasm. Might run on eth2/Ewasm.

    There are also blockchain specific features like: https://medium.com/tqtezos/tickets-on-tezos-part-1-a7cad8cc7...

  • Why would someone build on Tezos rather than Solana?
    2 projects | /r/tezos | 19 Apr 2021
    Rust is very nice and might be a good fit for smart contracts tough i am not sure what you really gain over Haskell. In Tezos you have a more developed ecosystem and can code in Python, Ligo, Archetype, Haskell and in the future Juvix. You also have a human readable low level (assembly like) representation in Michelson that you can do optimizations and/or run formal proofs with Coq. Smart contracts are a very very special beast and i am somewhat sceptical about developing them in a general purpose language vs a domain/smart contract specific one in the long run (but i could be wrong here).
  • ELI5 This “superior tech” Tezos has
    5 projects | /r/tezos | 29 Mar 2021
    and in the future: https://juvix.org/ (This stuff is just ridiculously advanced)

What are some alternatives?

When comparing tzip and juvix you can also consider the following projects:

plutus - The Plutus language implementation and tools

coq-tezos-of-ocaml

mi-cho-coq

morley

quipuswap-sdk - đź”­ QuipuSwap SDK for JavaScript.

linear-base - Standard library for linear types in Haskell.

salmonella - Wrecking sandwich traders for fun and profit

dexter2tz

circt - Circuit IR Compilers and Tools

CompilerJobs - A listing of compiler, language and runtime teams for people looking for jobs in this area

taiga - A framework for generalized shielded state transitions

tezos