I Cast Fist to Programming@programming.devEnglish • 1 year agoWhich language you wish would really grow and reach mainstream adoption?message-square150fedilinkarrow-up1144arrow-down16file-text
arrow-up1138arrow-down1message-squareWhich language you wish would really grow and reach mainstream adoption?I Cast Fist to Programming@programming.devEnglish • 1 year agomessage-square150fedilinkfile-text
Assume mainstream adoption as used by around 7% of all github projects Personally, I’d like to see Nim get that growth.
minus-square@alflennik@lemmy.worldlinkfedilink19•1 year agoI’m obsessed with an extremely little known language called Grain. It’s not quite ready for production but it has an insanely intuitive functional syntax that I want to use noww.
minus-squaredavawenlinkfedilink2•1 year agoInteresting! I see OCaml with rust syntax, for the web, which checks out the project goal of bringing functional patterns to everyday programmers.
minus-square@lascapi@jlai.lulinkfedilink1•1 year ago One of the most exciting things about Grain is that it compiles to WebAssembly. That’s a cool feature. What is the particularity that you talked about? In my point of view it looks like JS/TS with arrow functions. 😁
minus-square@spartanatreyu@programming.devlinkfedilink1•1 year ago it looks like JS/TS with arrow functions. JS/TS already has arrow functions.
minus-square@morrowind@lemmy.mllinkfedilink1•1 year agoCould you give some examples of what you like so much?
I’m obsessed with an extremely little known language called Grain. It’s not quite ready for production but it has an insanely intuitive functional syntax that I want to use noww.
Interesting!
I see OCaml with rust syntax, for the web, which checks out the project goal of bringing functional patterns to everyday programmers.
That’s a cool feature.
What is the particularity that you talked about?
In my point of view it looks like JS/TS with arrow functions. 😁
JS/TS already has arrow functions.
Could you give some examples of what you like so much?