Assume mainstream adoption as used by around 7% of all github projects

Personally, I'd like to see Nim get that growth.

  • WatTyler@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    I'm learning Rust at the moment and I too think I have some reservations with its syntax. Most of these reservations come from my strong preference for functional programming over OOP.

    I am unsure if I like method-syntax period, even if it isn't inherently OO. Chaining just makes me feel uncomfortable in a way piping doesn't.

    Also it seems idiomatic for values of enumerated types to be written Type::Enum, which seems ugly and unnecessary.

    What'd you make of this article?: https://matklad.github.io/2023/01/26/rusts-ugly-syntax.html

    • Miaou@jlai.lu
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      1 year ago

      About the article you linked:

      Author is removing every part of the initial function, admitting there are reasons those things are there in the first place, only to be left with a slightly more verbose version of an equivalent python implementation. Well then just use python?

      Author also doesn't seem to understand what static polymorphism is/why this specific function is generic. It's not strictly about "bytes", it's about avoiding virtual calls/have nicer API. Author conveniently omits mentioning the clone() calls their version requires from the client call. Or they would make everything automatically cloned, and I already addressed that in the first paragraph I

      Finally, standard libraries are notoriously bad examples of "normal" code. They mention it, but still declare that that their example is relevant. If the functions I wrote were compiled and used thousands of times per day I would probably worry more about splitting generic and concrete implementations. I'll take this over anything in the C++ standard library (which is a much more relevant language to compare rust with than e.g. python)