I Cast Fist@programming.dev to Programming@programming.devEnglish · 11 months agoWhich language you wish would really grow and reach mainstream adoption?message-squaremessage-square116fedilinkarrow-up1138arrow-down15file-text
arrow-up1133arrow-down1message-squareWhich language you wish would really grow and reach mainstream adoption?I Cast Fist@programming.dev to Programming@programming.devEnglish · 11 months agomessage-square116fedilinkfile-text
Assume mainstream adoption as used by around 7% of all github projects Personally, I’d like to see Nim get that growth.
minus-squarealflennik@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up19·11 months 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-squaredavawen@programming.devlinkfedilinkarrow-up2·11 months agoInteresting! I see OCaml with rust syntax, for the web, which checks out the project goal of bringing functional patterns to everyday programmers.
minus-squarelascapi@jlai.lulinkfedilinkarrow-up1·11 months 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-squarespartanatreyu@programming.devlinkfedilinkarrow-up1·11 months ago it looks like JS/TS with arrow functions. JS/TS already has arrow functions.
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.