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reddit discussion on replacing Python in 0install
Jun 10, 2013
Graham Fawcett
Jun 10, 2013
Jesse Phillips
Jun 10, 2013
Anthony Goins
Jun 10, 2013
Jesse Phillips
Jun 11, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 11, 2013
David Nadlinger
Jun 11, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 11, 2013
Jesse Phillips
Jun 11, 2013
David Nadlinger
Jun 11, 2013
Infiltrator
Jun 11, 2013
Nick Sabalausky
Jun 11, 2013
Jacob Carlborg
Jun 11, 2013
Nick Sabalausky
Jun 11, 2013
estew
Jun 11, 2013
Nick Sabalausky
Jun 11, 2013
Jacob Carlborg
Jun 11, 2013
Jesse Phillips
Jun 11, 2013
Jérôme M. Berger
Jun 11, 2013
QAston
Jun 11, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 11, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 12, 2013
Nick Sabalausky
Jun 11, 2013
Denis Koroskin
Jun 12, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 12, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 12, 2013
deadalnix
Jun 12, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 12, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 12, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 12, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 12, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 12, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 13, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 13, 2013
H. S. Teoh
Jun 14, 2013
Jacob Carlborg
Jun 14, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 14, 2013
Denis Koroskin
Jun 12, 2013
Dmitry Olshansky
Jun 12, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 14, 2013
Denis Koroskin
Jun 14, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 14, 2013
Denis Koroskin
Jun 14, 2013
deadalnix
Jun 14, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 14, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 14, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 15, 2013
deadalnix
Jun 15, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 15, 2013
deadalnix
Jun 15, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 15, 2013
deadalnix
Jun 15, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 15, 2013
deadalnix
Jun 15, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 12, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 12, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 12, 2013
deadalnix
Jun 12, 2013
Jérôme M. Berger
Jun 12, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 12, 2013
Adam D. Ruppe
Jun 12, 2013
Walter Bright
Jun 10, 2013
bearophile
Jun 10, 2013
ixid
Jun 10, 2013
bearophile
June 10, 2013
Hi folks,

There's an interesting discussion going on at Reddit about choosing a replacement language for 0install:

http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/1g1fhf/case_study_for_replacing_python_in_0install/

I've tried to do a bit of D advocacy there, but there's more to be done. :) If you have a few moments to dispel some D myths, and contribute constructively to the discussion, please take a look!

Best,
Graham
June 10, 2013
On Monday, 10 June 2013 at 18:25:05 UTC, Graham Fawcett wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> There's an interesting discussion going on at Reddit about choosing a replacement language for 0install:
>
> http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/1g1fhf/case_study_for_replacing_python_in_0install/
>
> I've tried to do a bit of D advocacy there, but there's more to be done. :) If you have a few moments to dispel some D myths, and contribute constructively to the discussion, please take a look!
>
> Best,
> Graham

I don't know how to make this test on Windows (current OS). But he uses this to test that failure to print hello correctly indicates failure.

./hello 1< /dev/null; echo Exit status: $?

And Rust is the only one to pass in his list (ATS, C#, Go, Haskell, OCaml, Python)
June 10, 2013
Graham Fawcett:

> http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/1g1fhf/case_study_for_replacing_python_in_0install/

I was about to link that Reddit thread here myself :-)

The original article proposes to translate to your language this little piece of Python+libs and measure its speed, safety in presence of errors, etc:


#!/usr/bin/env python
import os, sys, json
envname = os.path.basename(sys.argv[0])
args = json.loads(os.environ["0install-runenv-" + envname])
os.execv(args[0], args + sys.argv[1:])


Later he proposes other means to measure a language quality. Overall the comparison is quite interesting, despite several methodological problems.

Bye,
bearophile
June 10, 2013
On Monday, 10 June 2013 at 20:51:16 UTC, Jesse Phillips wrote:
> On Monday, 10 June 2013 at 18:25:05 UTC, Graham Fawcett wrote:
>> Hi folks,
>>
>> There's an interesting discussion going on at Reddit about choosing a replacement language for 0install:
>>
>> http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/1g1fhf/case_study_for_replacing_python_in_0install/
>>
>> I've tried to do a bit of D advocacy there, but there's more to be done. :) If you have a few moments to dispel some D myths, and contribute constructively to the discussion, please take a look!
>>
>> Best,
>> Graham
>
> I don't know how to make this test on Windows (current OS). But he uses this to test that failure to print hello correctly indicates failure.
>
> ./hello 1< /dev/null; echo Exit status: $?
>
> And Rust is the only one to pass in his list (ATS, C#, Go, Haskell, OCaml, Python)

If you want to know what happens on my linux box

  1 module hellotest;
  2
  3 import std.stdio;
  4
  5 void main()
  6 {
  7         writeln("hello world.");
  8 }

anthony@LinuxGen12:~/projects/temp$ ./hellotest
hello world.
anthony@LinuxGen12:~/projects/temp$ ./hellotest 1</dev/null; echo status : $?
status : 0
anthony@LinuxGen12:~/projects/temp$



June 10, 2013
On Monday, 10 June 2013 at 18:25:05 UTC, Graham Fawcett wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> There's an interesting discussion going on at Reddit about choosing a replacement language for 0install:
>
> http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/1g1fhf/case_study_for_replacing_python_in_0install/
>
> I've tried to do a bit of D advocacy there, but there's more to be done. :) If you have a few moments to dispel some D myths, and contribute constructively to the discussion, please take a look!
>
> Best,
> Graham

Be careful with advocating D too much, I think what with the very positive but visible D conference coverage we don't want to seem like zealous fanboys. It may be better to let discussion of D cool off for a while, then return when there is something new and cool to show rather than get into arguments over Rust vs D. Those will only degenerate and make D users look bad.

This is important- it reflects on the users and the language and can very easily turn people away while single misinformed comments will not be noticed by all that many people.

Don't rubbish Rust. Comparisons quickly and easily turn negative.
June 10, 2013
On Monday, 10 June 2013 at 22:06:29 UTC, Anthony Goins wrote:
> If you want to know what happens on my linux box
>
>   1 module hellotest;
>   2
>   3 import std.stdio;
>   4
>   5 void main()
>   6 {
>   7         writeln("hello world.");
>   8 }
>
> anthony@LinuxGen12:~/projects/temp$ ./hellotest
> hello world.
> anthony@LinuxGen12:~/projects/temp$ ./hellotest 1</dev/null; echo status : $?
> status : 0
> anthony@LinuxGen12:~/projects/temp$

So D fails the test too. But now that I think about it, isn't /dev/null where you write data to a black hole... maybe he meant /dev/zero
June 10, 2013
ixid:

> Be careful with advocating D too much, I think what with the very positive but visible D conference coverage we don't want to seem like zealous fanboys.

Right.
A better idea is to port the proposed code to D, count how many points it gets, and show all of it in the Reddit thread.

Bye,
bearophile
June 11, 2013
On 6/10/2013 4:26 PM, Jesse Phillips wrote:
> On Monday, 10 June 2013 at 22:06:29 UTC, Anthony Goins wrote:
>> If you want to know what happens on my linux box
>>
>>   1 module hellotest;
>>   2
>>   3 import std.stdio;
>>   4
>>   5 void main()
>>   6 {
>>   7         writeln("hello world.");
>>   8 }
>>
>> anthony@LinuxGen12:~/projects/temp$ ./hellotest
>> hello world.
>> anthony@LinuxGen12:~/projects/temp$ ./hellotest 1</dev/null; echo status : $?
>> status : 0
>> anthony@LinuxGen12:~/projects/temp$
>
> So D fails the test too. But now that I think about it, isn't /dev/null where
> you write data to a black hole... maybe he meant /dev/zero

Yeah, I thought /dev/null was a bit bucket. D shouldn't fail on writing to that, and didn't.
June 11, 2013
On Tuesday, 11 June 2013 at 00:27:28 UTC, Walter Bright wrote:
> On 6/10/2013 4:26 PM, Jesse Phillips wrote:
>> So D fails the test too. But now that I think about it, isn't /dev/null where
>> you write data to a black hole... maybe he meant /dev/zero
>
> Yeah, I thought /dev/null was a bit bucket. D shouldn't fail on writing to that, and didn't.

The command actually redirects /dev/null to fd 1 as an *input* stream, thus rendering it non-writable.

David
June 11, 2013
On 6/10/2013 5:35 PM, David Nadlinger wrote:
> On Tuesday, 11 June 2013 at 00:27:28 UTC, Walter Bright wrote:
>> On 6/10/2013 4:26 PM, Jesse Phillips wrote:
>>> So D fails the test too. But now that I think about it, isn't /dev/null where
>>> you write data to a black hole... maybe he meant /dev/zero
>>
>> Yeah, I thought /dev/null was a bit bucket. D shouldn't fail on writing to
>> that, and didn't.
>
> The command actually redirects /dev/null to fd 1 as an *input* stream, thus
> rendering it non-writable.

Ah, I see. In that case, writeln should have thrown an exception. Should submit a bug report.

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