Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Wednesday, 5 May 2021 at 18:50:05 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote: What's wrong with WSL. I think it is a great idea. What Imperatorn said is the write thing. Sorry for not being clear.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Wednesday, 5 May 2021 at 18:50:05 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote: On Friday, 30 April 2021 at 14:16:16 UTC, Vinod K Chandran wrote: On Wednesday, 28 April 2021 at 22:41:03 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote: [...] Pros of **Crystal** 1. Attractive syntax. I like Ruby like syntax. It's really expressive. Cons of Crystal 1. It doesn't have a compiler for Windows. It uses WSL based compiler and I think it's a bad idea. I don't think I need to tell the pros & cons of **D lang** in it's own forum. BTW, I wonder to see someone says that they have succeeded in compiling a **tkD** example code. I tried it with no luck. So I gave up that idea. What's wrong with WSL. I think it is a great idea. Maybe he meant WSL is good, but relying on it for Windows support is suboptimal. I kinda agree
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Friday, 30 April 2021 at 14:16:16 UTC, Vinod K Chandran wrote: On Wednesday, 28 April 2021 at 22:41:03 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote: What are the strengths and weaknesses comparing the two languages ? I can name a strength of dlang is the working binding to tk and gtk. Pros of **Crystal** 1. Attractive syntax. I like Ruby like syntax. It's really expressive. Cons of Crystal 1. It doesn't have a compiler for Windows. It uses WSL based compiler and I think it's a bad idea. I don't think I need to tell the pros & cons of **D lang** in it's own forum. BTW, I wonder to see someone says that they have succeeded in compiling a **tkD** example code. I tried it with no luck. So I gave up that idea. What's wrong with WSL. I think it is a great idea.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Monday, 3 May 2021 at 12:02:50 UTC, user1234 wrote: I seriously wonder if this is a criterion. For example Gitlab which is known to get updated each month, still uses Ruby in their backend. So their clients use scripts that could be 2x to 20x faster if made in Crystal. I don't think it makes any difference. They've rewritten the performance critical parts in Go as needed: https://about.gitlab.com/blog/2018/10/29/why-we-use-rails-to-build-gitlab/ I very much doubt they'd trust their business to a small, work-in-progress language like Crystal.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Saturday, 1 May 2021 at 13:04:15 UTC, sighoya wrote: On Wednesday, 28 April 2021 at 22:41:03 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote: What are the strengths and weaknesses comparing the two languages ? I can name a strength of dlang is the working binding to tk and gtk. Just to say, Crystal is a neat language, feels like a static ruby. Strengths: - Poweful type inference - lightweight julian/ruby like syntax - nice lightweight macros, don't know if they were a good fit for D - nice yield builtins - feels like a lightweight Java - nice high level feeling and is GCed Weaknesses: - as I said, it is hard to understand when type inference is used completely everywhere, said that this is crystals killer feature - slow compilation time just because of the "type inferred everywhere" design I seriously wonder if this is a criterion. For example Gitlab which is known to get updated each month, still uses Ruby in their backend. So their clients use scripts that could be 2x to 20x faster if made in Crystal. - the OOP system lacks specific features from other OOP systems - hasn't the same support for low level programming as in D or Nim - is relative unknown, although I don't know why.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Friday, 30 April 2021 at 19:25:16 UTC, Siemargl wrote: I did this @2014. No problems remembered. May be it's my fault. Let me check once again.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Friday, 30 April 2021 at 17:01:52 UTC, TheGag96 wrote: I used tkD a long time ago. Look through [this repo](https://github.com/thegag96/codewrite) - maybe something in there will help you. Thanks for the link. Let me check.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Friday, 30 April 2021 at 14:49:33 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote: tkd works perfectly. Which O.S. are you using ? I can guide. I am using Windows 10 x64.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Wednesday, 28 April 2021 at 22:41:03 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote: What are the strengths and weaknesses comparing the two languages ? I can name a strength of dlang is the working binding to tk and gtk. Just to say, Crystal is a neat language, feels like a static ruby. Strengths: - Poweful type inference - lightweight julian/ruby like syntax - nice lightweight macros, don't know if they were a good fit for D - nice yield builtins - feels like a lightweight Java - nice high level feeling and is GCed Weaknesses: - as I said, it is hard to understand when type inference is used completely everywhere, said that this is crystals killer feature - slow compilation time just because of the "type inferred everywhere" design - the OOP system lacks specific features from other OOP systems - hasn't the same support for low level programming as in D or Nim - is relative unknown, although I don't know why.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Friday, 30 April 2021 at 14:16:16 UTC, Vinod K Chandran wrote: BTW, I wonder to see someone says that they have succeeded in compiling a **tkD** example code. I tried it with no luck. So I gave up that idea. I did this @2014. No problems remembered.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Friday, 30 April 2021 at 14:16:16 UTC, Vinod K Chandran wrote: On Wednesday, 28 April 2021 at 22:41:03 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote: What are the strengths and weaknesses comparing the two languages ? I can name a strength of dlang is the working binding to tk and gtk. Pros of **Crystal** 1. Attractive syntax. I like Ruby like syntax. It's really expressive. Cons of Crystal 1. It doesn't have a compiler for Windows. It uses WSL based compiler and I think it's a bad idea. I don't think I need to tell the pros & cons of **D lang** in it's own forum. BTW, I wonder to see someone says that they have succeeded in compiling a **tkD** example code. I tried it with no luck. So I gave up that idea. I used tkD a long time ago. Look through [this repo](https://github.com/thegag96/codewrite) - maybe something in there will help you.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
tkd works perfectly. Which O.S. are you using ? I can guide.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Wednesday, 28 April 2021 at 22:41:03 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote: What are the strengths and weaknesses comparing the two languages ? I can name a strength of dlang is the working binding to tk and gtk. Pros of **Crystal** 1. Attractive syntax. I like Ruby like syntax. It's really expressive. Cons of Crystal 1. It doesn't have a compiler for Windows. It uses WSL based compiler and I think it's a bad idea. I don't think I need to tell the pros & cons of **D lang** in it's own forum. BTW, I wonder to see someone says that they have succeeded in compiling a **tkD** example code. I tried it with no luck. So I gave up that idea.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Thursday, 29 April 2021 at 22:47:08 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote: What is the importance of type-annotations in which cases. Specifying invariants which becomes very important when refactoring code. Further it aids as documentation to understand the structures behind. @X @Y @Z makes code sometimes unreadable. You mean something like `List!(HashMap!(String,T))`, yes, but I like it in productive code. It's often the case that verbosity becomes a plus in productive software development, as more people have to read code that to write it, a reason why Java is so successful Sometimes there is a good reason Mostly for prototyping and obvious cases. But the most important point of that is to write faster, I wish the IDE would help for this instead of the compiler's inference. I even think D doesn't even profit very well for inferred types, you need anyway to specify auto which only saves work for large type(application)s. But when they are large, you probably want to prefer annotating the type for the variable. Instead, I want to point to some interesting solution C# offers to save typing and also being explicit about the type: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/dotnet/welcome-to-c-9-0/#target-typed-new-expressions In fact, one could imagine that they overload the new operator (at compiler level) to infer the type from the call site type annotation.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
What is the importance of type-annotations in which cases. @X @Y @Z makes code sometimes unreadable. Sometimes there is a good reason
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Wednesday, 28 April 2021 at 22:41:03 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote: What are the strengths and weaknesses comparing the two languages ? I can name a strength of dlang is the working binding to tk and gtk. Less type annotations, fewer guarantees, less compile performance as cons.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Thursday, 29 April 2021 at 05:54:24 UTC, Berni44 wrote: On Thursday, 29 April 2021 at 05:41:45 UTC, Imperatorn wrote: Crystal has no installer for Windows Is this a strength or a weakness? (SCNR) lol :) In all seriousness though. Since it a quite large population of the world, it's a weakness.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Wednesday, 28 April 2021 at 22:41:03 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote: What are the strengths and weaknesses comparing the two languages ? I can name a strength of dlang is the working binding to tk and gtk. Crystal is Web-only focused. And Crystal is not popular, even compared to D.
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Thursday, 29 April 2021 at 05:41:45 UTC, Imperatorn wrote: Crystal has no installer for Windows Is this a strength or a weakness? (SCNR)
Re: dlang vs crystal-language
On Wednesday, 28 April 2021 at 22:41:03 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote: What are the strengths and weaknesses comparing the two languages ? I can name a strength of dlang is the working binding to tk and gtk. Crystal has no installer for Windows