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  3. @whitequark which one is the latter?

@whitequark which one is the latter?

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  • chaos@gts.schizofucked.monsterC chaos@gts.schizofucked.monster

    @resistor @whitequark @IngaLovinde agree, it eventually felt like if we wanted to add anything to our projects we'd have to refactor half the project to add it
    especially as we was using it in the pretty early days and ended up having to fork a good part of the stdlib just to get our program not crashing due to hitting unimplemented or 'unreachable' code paths
    it seems a lot better nowadays though and we've been considering trying it again for writing memory safe wrappers and abstractions

    ingalovinde@embracing.spaceI This user is from outside of this forum
    ingalovinde@embracing.spaceI This user is from outside of this forum
    ingalovinde@embracing.space
    wrote last edited by
    #12

    @chaos @resistor @whitequark refactoring is not a problem per se. The problem is that with zig, it's much easier to break things accidentally without noticing during the refactoring than it is with rust (where almost all such accidental breakages will simply result in a compile-time error).

    chaos@gts.schizofucked.monsterC 1 Reply Last reply
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    • srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
      srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
      srazkvt@tech.lgbt
      wrote last edited by
      #13

      @whitequark honestly even like 2 years ago (before llms became such a cancer on foss) i saw more of a future in zig than in rust

      rust has for a long time been hostile to bootstrapping, abi compatibility (mostly being able to be used from other languages), and compiler reimplementation

      it's still unsure how zig will fare for those, but honestly, i am more optimistic, and when meson/muon supports zig, i'm probably going to start using it

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      • srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
        srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
        srazkvt@tech.lgbt
        wrote last edited by
        #14

        @whitequark yeah, understandable. i mostly value reimplementability and compatibility, as that is how you empower people (imo), by providing a stable base, and rust is the opposite of that

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        • lixou@hachyderm.ioL This user is from outside of this forum
          lixou@hachyderm.ioL This user is from outside of this forum
          lixou@hachyderm.io
          wrote last edited by
          #15

          @whitequark good thing university taught rawdogging riscv assembly

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          • srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
            srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
            srazkvt@tech.lgbt
            wrote last edited by
            #16

            @whitequark i am fundamentally against making things hard to reimplement, especially compilers, because i want to put as little friction as possible in the way of people porting software in a language to their platform.

            making reimplementations impossible isn't how you protect users, it's how you lock them to a specific technical instance, and to the whims of whoever decides the direction it goes. allowing reimplementations allow the users to at least partially put their trust into another party instead, giving them much more power

            non standard extensions in compilers is not enough of a cost to not do it imo, since it is up to projects to be responsible about which extensions to use or not

            PS: also fuck ISO sucks, requiring payment to have access to documentation is the opposite of empowerement, and we can have standards without ISO anyway

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            • whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
              whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
              whitequark@social.treehouse.systems
              wrote last edited by
              #17

              @SRAZKVT now, i don't think compilers should be intentionally hard to reimplement. i just don't think that "ease of reimplementation" is a valuable target to pursue on its own and it has a somewhat negative effect on the language overall; whether this negative effect will become a serious problem in practice basically depends on how homogeneous your culture is, i think

              whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW srazkvt@tech.lgbtS 2 Replies Last reply
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              • srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
                srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
                srazkvt@tech.lgbt
                wrote last edited by
                #18

                @whitequark it is up to the maintainer to decide which extensions they require, if a downstream user's compiler doesn't support it, then they can either add it to their compiler, patch the codebase to not require it, or go for something else instead

                whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW 1 Reply Last reply
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                • whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW whitequark@social.treehouse.systems

                  @SRAZKVT now, i don't think compilers should be intentionally hard to reimplement. i just don't think that "ease of reimplementation" is a valuable target to pursue on its own and it has a somewhat negative effect on the language overall; whether this negative effect will become a serious problem in practice basically depends on how homogeneous your culture is, i think

                  whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
                  whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
                  whitequark@social.treehouse.systems
                  wrote last edited by
                  #19

                  @SRAZKVT or to put it in much more primitive terms: if you fork the language then have the decency to change the name, too

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                  • srazkvt@tech.lgbtS srazkvt@tech.lgbt

                    @whitequark it is up to the maintainer to decide which extensions they require, if a downstream user's compiler doesn't support it, then they can either add it to their compiler, patch the codebase to not require it, or go for something else instead

                    whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
                    whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
                    whitequark@social.treehouse.systems
                    wrote last edited by
                    #20

                    @SRAZKVT the practical outcome of all three cases is make-work

                    srazkvt@tech.lgbtS 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW whitequark@social.treehouse.systems

                      @SRAZKVT now, i don't think compilers should be intentionally hard to reimplement. i just don't think that "ease of reimplementation" is a valuable target to pursue on its own and it has a somewhat negative effect on the language overall; whether this negative effect will become a serious problem in practice basically depends on how homogeneous your culture is, i think

                      srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
                      srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
                      srazkvt@tech.lgbt
                      wrote last edited by
                      #21

                      @whitequark obviously, it isn't absolute, but if you have the option as language designer between doing just syntax sugar around already existing features, or adding a whole new component, then the former should be prioritised

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                      • whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW whitequark@social.treehouse.systems

                        @SRAZKVT the practical outcome of all three cases is make-work

                        srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
                        srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
                        srazkvt@tech.lgbt
                        wrote last edited by
                        #22

                        @whitequark yes, making software work on a system it wasn't designed for is make-work, it would be regardless

                        having more options on how to tackle makes it less bad though

                        whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • srazkvt@tech.lgbtS srazkvt@tech.lgbt

                          @whitequark yes, making software work on a system it wasn't designed for is make-work, it would be regardless

                          having more options on how to tackle makes it less bad though

                          whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
                          whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
                          whitequark@social.treehouse.systems
                          wrote last edited by
                          #23

                          @SRAZKVT there's several things implicit here that i don't really like:

                          • placing the burden of making it work on the end user and/or maintainer (ocaml sidesteps this nicely by providing a baseline bytecode interpreter that's mostly fast enough; no language extensions are involved at any point)
                          • biasing the language towards the endless scope-creep of implementations that gave us c instead of going "no, if you want this to run on a 8-bit AVR, get a different language, this one isn't fit for the use case" (which would leave everyone involved happier in those cases)
                          srazkvt@tech.lgbtS 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW whitequark@social.treehouse.systems

                            @SRAZKVT there's several things implicit here that i don't really like:

                            • placing the burden of making it work on the end user and/or maintainer (ocaml sidesteps this nicely by providing a baseline bytecode interpreter that's mostly fast enough; no language extensions are involved at any point)
                            • biasing the language towards the endless scope-creep of implementations that gave us c instead of going "no, if you want this to run on a 8-bit AVR, get a different language, this one isn't fit for the use case" (which would leave everyone involved happier in those cases)
                            srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
                            srazkvt@tech.lgbtS This user is from outside of this forum
                            srazkvt@tech.lgbt
                            wrote last edited by
                            #24

                            @whitequark yes, the language should have a baseline that is expected to be implemented everywhere, that's the language without extensions

                            widely implemented extensions should be included in the baseline eventually to better compatibility

                            and for the second, yeah, but if you are on 8bit avr, you likely don't need a kernel with system utilities written by someone else who has no knowledge of your system, you'll likely need something completely custom anyway

                            whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • srazkvt@tech.lgbtS srazkvt@tech.lgbt

                              @whitequark yes, the language should have a baseline that is expected to be implemented everywhere, that's the language without extensions

                              widely implemented extensions should be included in the baseline eventually to better compatibility

                              and for the second, yeah, but if you are on 8bit avr, you likely don't need a kernel with system utilities written by someone else who has no knowledge of your system, you'll likely need something completely custom anyway

                              whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
                              whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
                              whitequark@social.treehouse.systems
                              wrote last edited by
                              #25

                              @SRAZKVT we are talking past each other. ocaml's situation that i'm mentioning is "if you are on certain platforms, then if you want your code faster, you're out of luck", in contrast to an approach where "if you are on certain platforms, you have to use certain extensions to make things faster". i think that while both have merit the former is severely underutilized. not every platform needs to be supported equally. this is not the same "baseline" as a "core without extensions" in that nobody except for the compiler maintainer and the people using that platform have to spend effort on a platform they never use.

                              for the latter part, rust has a 8-bit avr port that i've always found fairly senseless. it isn't a very nice thing to do to others to take a language where programmers could previously assume that a machine word is 32-bit and to extend it to a 8-bit microcontroller series which violates that assumption. i've always thought it should've just been left out of scope entirely

                              wermi@donotsta.reW 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                                navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                                navi@social.vlhl.dev
                                wrote last edited by
                                #26
                                @whitequark @SRAZKVT

                                > i don't think bootstrapping and having a stable abi are an essential component of a healthy ecosystem. in particular not having a robust interoperability story can motivate people to reimplement a lot of existing software, hopefully while taking lessons learned to heart

                                rust doesn't have a stable abi across rust <-> rust modules/crates, which has nothing to do with makes does the opposite of what you say -- all it does is making rust-rust dynamic linking impossible, so people have to drop to the system abi for it, and/or make any sort of build cache invalid whenever you update the compiler
                                whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW A 2 Replies Last reply
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                                • navi@social.vlhl.devN navi@social.vlhl.dev
                                  @whitequark @SRAZKVT

                                  > i don't think bootstrapping and having a stable abi are an essential component of a healthy ecosystem. in particular not having a robust interoperability story can motivate people to reimplement a lot of existing software, hopefully while taking lessons learned to heart

                                  rust doesn't have a stable abi across rust <-> rust modules/crates, which has nothing to do with makes does the opposite of what you say -- all it does is making rust-rust dynamic linking impossible, so people have to drop to the system abi for it, and/or make any sort of build cache invalid whenever you update the compiler
                                  whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
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                                  whitequark@social.treehouse.systems
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #27

                                  @navi @SRAZKVT i know how rust works. any sort of friction at module boundaries creates a dual effect: first, it disincentivizes people from maintaining mixed codebases (we'd see a lot more mixed rust/c++ codebases if you could directly use polymorphic rust methods from c++, for example); second, it lets you avoid freezing the internals of your runtime on an implementation that more certainly than not has significant flaws (c++'s itanium abi dynamic_cast for example), or at least reduces how quickly that happens. these two things let you focus on addressing just your own mistakes, instead of adding everyone else's mistakes into the mix

                                  navi@social.vlhl.devN 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW whitequark@social.treehouse.systems

                                    @navi @SRAZKVT i know how rust works. any sort of friction at module boundaries creates a dual effect: first, it disincentivizes people from maintaining mixed codebases (we'd see a lot more mixed rust/c++ codebases if you could directly use polymorphic rust methods from c++, for example); second, it lets you avoid freezing the internals of your runtime on an implementation that more certainly than not has significant flaws (c++'s itanium abi dynamic_cast for example), or at least reduces how quickly that happens. these two things let you focus on addressing just your own mistakes, instead of adding everyone else's mistakes into the mix

                                    navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                                    navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                                    navi@social.vlhl.dev
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #28
                                    @whitequark @SRAZKVT

                                    a stable abi does not need to be exported to other languages

                                    it'd be even ideal to have rustc have an abi for rlibs and say "do not use this from somewhere else, we will not help you" -- and that would solve so many packaging pains with rust

                                    a system's programming language without a stable abi is pure hell

                                    for application programming maybe, not for system's
                                    whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • navi@social.vlhl.devN navi@social.vlhl.dev
                                      @whitequark @SRAZKVT

                                      a stable abi does not need to be exported to other languages

                                      it'd be even ideal to have rustc have an abi for rlibs and say "do not use this from somewhere else, we will not help you" -- and that would solve so many packaging pains with rust

                                      a system's programming language without a stable abi is pure hell

                                      for application programming maybe, not for system's
                                      whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
                                      whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
                                      whitequark@social.treehouse.systems
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #29

                                      @navi @SRAZKVT there is nothing unique about systems programming that requires a stable ABI. there are many things about old Linux distributions that are built around the assumptions of having one, but that's a separate thing and if we are to have a discussion of this at all that's the one i want to have, not a proxy for it

                                      navi@social.vlhl.devN 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW whitequark@social.treehouse.systems

                                        @navi @SRAZKVT there is nothing unique about systems programming that requires a stable ABI. there are many things about old Linux distributions that are built around the assumptions of having one, but that's a separate thing and if we are to have a discussion of this at all that's the one i want to have, not a proxy for it

                                        navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                                        navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                                        navi@social.vlhl.dev
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #30
                                        @whitequark @SRAZKVT

                                        the unique thing is the kind of software that is written in them

                                        and as someone that suffered to package rust and tools in similar languages, that's a discussion i can have if desired yes -- mostly involving dynamic linking, but even with static linking, the lack of being able to package prebuilds also creates issues (not even considering the pain that lockfiles are)
                                        whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • navi@social.vlhl.devN navi@social.vlhl.dev
                                          @whitequark @SRAZKVT

                                          the unique thing is the kind of software that is written in them

                                          and as someone that suffered to package rust and tools in similar languages, that's a discussion i can have if desired yes -- mostly involving dynamic linking, but even with static linking, the lack of being able to package prebuilds also creates issues (not even considering the pain that lockfiles are)
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                                          whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
                                          whitequark@social.treehouse.systems
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #31

                                          @navi @SRAZKVT my position on distributions boils down to "it is pretty weird and otherwise unprecedented that we've normalized it that once you release software some other group of people (who don't really understand how it works) is going to build and publish it, giving you little to no say in the matter, but leaving you responsible for support in the end". so far as this is true i think the value distributions provide to me as a developer, and also as a user, is neutral to negative. Debian is the worst at this but I think the entire model should be replaced

                                          navi@social.vlhl.devN 1 Reply Last reply
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