@Shepmaster It has been a busy few months in my life let me tell you hahah. I got married mid-July and in September my wife and I moved to Japan for a year
Nowadays, I am switching back to Java from Rust due to work requirements. Most of the time it feels as childs play after getting used to Rust compiler :)
Can you really say there are languages "with ADT" and languages "without ADT" ? Even in Java you often define your frameworks with intefaces. Rust goes much further but I don't think it's all black and white
gosh... I was reading your previous comment as about Abstract Data Types, which are related but not the same... So yes, you're right (when talking about Algebraic Data Types which are a more precise topic)
@FrenchBoiethios For me the unique selling point is the trait system (typeclasses if you like) vs OOP. (I'm not saying ADT is not good, on the contrary, it is bloody brilliant and I'm missing it on a daily basis when I work with other languages at work but having things plain and simple without the awfulness of inheritance makes your objects so much more flexible, leaner, modular, easy to reason about, etc.)
Rust is harder and make you sometimes bang your head because you thought it would be more proper to do a zero-String framework and then you have to jungle with awful constructs because of the severe lifetime problems you forced yourself into
@Stargateur I feel that too much attention is given to that problem. There are oddities, but JS conversions are OK once you admit a variable doesn't define anything typewise. Most of the conversions in this grid are quite natural.
@DenysSéguret I couldn't disagree more. Being dynamic and strongly typed (similar to Python) has nothing to do with those type conversions. It all boils down to one crucial detail in the language-design-philosophy: should errors pass silently or not? Or in other words, should the language designer be more clever than they actually are and try to guess what they obviously can't just to avoid trhowing/returning any kind of error?
The answer to that -- in any SANE language -- is obviously no.
You just make everyone's (literally, the implementer, the user, the maintainer, the consumer, etc.) life as miserable as you possibly can.
That's what I'm talking about -- conversion bugs is one thing, but the issue is not the conversion bugs but the main philosophy of trying bloody hard not to give an error
another example is getting things from a container resulting in undefined
instead of a proper error if the key/property is not present
these idiotic decisions make it impossible even with adults to build sound products
@DenysSéguret Ofc it knows how to handle. If you insist you can get into the realm of no-bounds check at all, but other than that, it can panic, it can do results, and it can do options
all of which are better solutions than to introduce yet another singleton value to indicate something is not there
I don't want to defend JS too much, because I too I'm fed up with its propension to make you write buggy code, and overall to force you to test before you know it's probably OK, but I also know you can write some useful working things in JS with a lot of discipline and consistency
@DenysSéguret I also agree with peter :p that the same problem that people who init their variable no matter what, this make the variable imposible to be unitialized but put a stupid value in it so the code don't work, instead the compiler could have told you use of unitialized variable
put zero by default, or do the "best" guess in code is bad IMO
@PeterVaro I still don't understand why there is two null and undefined even by reading explanation I still find it stupid as fuck
@DenysSéguret rust push iterator use not index use
@E_net4saysReinstate Esperanto is a construct language and by this will never really be used, language is something that evolute, something that you share with people like you. a crafted language don't have this. Well, maybe in a lot of years it could be the case but at this time other language will have change again and a lot of language will disappear. We can't predict what language will be use in the future but there will be a language that will be use by everyone, but it will not be Esperanto :p
probably the future of english but english sux in my opinion ^^
@Stargateur Sorry, I didn't think anyone would write an answer at that moment. And as I said, my answer is really not very polished. So providing a polished answer that explains a few things in more details could certainly be useful