(joke in the title stolen from a redditor)

Context: some Rust kid vandalized cppreference.com today.

  • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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    9 months ago

    That kid is an asshole because cppreference is doing the lord’s work.

    Also, I know that language choice is one of the most important decisions when starting a new project but, personally, I work on a highly performance sensitive project that’s written in PHP. If you think you need Rust to be performant or type safe then you don’t really know what you’re doing yet. It makes it easier and increases theoretical limits - that is all.

    • istdaslol@feddit.de
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      9 months ago

      I want to tell the computer what it should do, not what the computer things I can do. That’s why I use scratch

        • manpacket@lemmyrs.org
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          9 months ago

          Is this a new project that was intentionally started in PHP or something legacy? Any interesting benchmarks? Like minimal wire to wire network processing time and where the bottleneck is?

          • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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            9 months ago

            Our project was something that has evolved from a full web app into a PHP backend fronted by a reactish SPAish thing. Our spool up time to cache our website is 13 ms from a cold start (after provisioning and stuff) so we’re pretty good at horizontal scaling. Once cached our overhead is 7ms for framework things. Our page load times across the board calvary wildly with 25ms being our target time but with some very large reports stretching into the seconds range - on those slow pages all those previous numbers are essentially irrelevant and performance is dictated solely by how much we’re investing into query caching and tuning.

            Personally I’m actually a big fan of PHP, it’s incredibly powerful and good with lists (and all good programming is list programming ;P). The typing is strong when enforced and weak when you choose. The lambda and reflection frameworks are robust and it has a number of interesting phpisms like magic functions and variable variables.

      • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        It’s a choice left up to developer but you can have static and runtime type checking enabled for as many functions as you desire. Theoretically you can have collection subtype checking but I’d say that PHP is still quite frail here as proper collection typing lacks any template-style typing but needs dedicated collection types.

    • herr@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      then you don’t really know what you’re doing yet.

      Can you elaborate on this? How are you guys making PHP so performant? Do you call C programs from it or something?

      • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        No, we just use good algorithmic approaches including an emphasis on lazy evaluation. It’d take out application like 20x as long to compute 2+2 compared to one written in C but computation in PHP isn’t our main bottleneck - it’s efficient network connection handling and psql query performance.

        Our PHP code is maintainable and expressive that makes it much easier to tune performance where it counts.

  • TootSweet@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    An attitude I’ve seen a lot among software developers is that basically there aren’t “good languages” and “bad languages.” That all languages are equal and all criticisms of particular languages and all opinions that some particular language is “bad” are invalid.

    I couldn’t disagree more.

    The syntax, tooling, standard library, third-party libraries, documentation quality, language maintainers’ policies, etc are of course factors that can be considered when evaluating how “good” a language is. But definitely one of the biggest factors that should be considered is how assholeish the community around a particular language is.

    A decade or two ago, Ruby developers had a reputation for being smug and assholeish. I can’t say I knew a statistically significant number of Ruby developers, but the ones I did know definitely embodied that stereotype. I’ve heard recently that the Rust community has similar issues.

    The Rust language has some interesting features that have made me want to look deeper, but what I’ve heard about the community around Rust has so far kept me away.

    I write Java for a paycheck, but for my side projects, Go is my (no pun intended) go-to language. I’ve heard nothing but good things about its community. I think I’ll stick with it for a while.

    • herr@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      But definitely one of the biggest factors that should be considered is how assholeish the community around a particular language is.

      I think all of the factors you’ve mentioned are extremely valid, but this is the one factor that I think should absolutely not count into whether something’s a ‘good’ or ‘bad’ language. If I’m choosing which technologies to use for my next project, the question of whether it has a rude vocal minority in its community is AS FAR DOWN on my list as possible. Right next to whether its name is hip or whether their homepage is engaging.

      • TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        A toxic community won’t help you in good faith when you’re running into issues, and this makes it harder to develop using a language with a toxic community.

        • herr@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          idk, how do I contact “the community” when I have an issue in the first place? All I know of is StackOverflow, and they’re honestly toxic enough to make me never ask questions there in the first place.

          • TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee
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            9 months ago

            Touche. I personally found Discord users to be helpful and welcoming, but that was moreso for libraries and not languages.

      • TootSweet@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Yeah, but the shittiness of a shitty community will come through in documentation that talks down to you and doesn’t dain to explain things properly. And then when you go and ask a question because it wasn’t well explained in the documentation and get derided for asking.

        Fanboys are also likely to mislead (including in documentation) by downplaying caveats in libraries and such. Documentation can end up being more like marketing speak than technical reference.

        You speak of “vocal minorities”, but I don’t think it’s quite as simple as that. Languages have cultures around them. (As do lots of other things. Video games. Hardware devices. Car brands. What have you.) If a language has a toxic community around it, it might be an indication that the people behind the language may lack the ability or motivation to maintain a better community. Or worse, that they’re doing things that promote or attract the shittiness.

        So, in short, I disagree with you. For one thing “everything about this language is great except its community is shitty” makes me suspicious that maybe everything about the language isn’t great and it has a really fanboyish community that likes to suppress any (even legitimate) negativity. Where I have to, I use the language I have to use, but when I have a choice, a shitty community is generally a deal breaker for me.

            • Schmeckinger@feddit.de
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              9 months ago

              Whats also nice is thst you put the documentation in the code and rust automatically generates a documentation page thsts hosted on docs.rs. So it makes really easy to have good docs for your stuff. If only everyone would document their stuff perfectly. A lot of the new released stuff gets released with minimal documentation.

    • jasory@programming.dev
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      9 months ago

      Pretty sure syntax is the only one that is even related to what a language is. All the rest are just ecosystem development primarily effected by popularity.

      • DreamButt@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Ruby is a really nice language especially when taken in the context of it’s time. Curious why you feel it isn’t worth being someone’s favorite?

        • darcy@sh.itjust.works
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          9 months ago

          its like python or lua but worse syntax and slower. we are not in the 90s anymore, i cant see any reason to use it unless working with a code base or library that already requires it. weakly typed interpreted languages are, imo, only good for certain applications, such as scripting or for beginners. why use ruby when lua or even python exist? i used to like ruby, btw, im not just a hater