<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0"><channel><title>Programming Languages</title><lastBuildDate>Tue, 9 Apr 2024 05:38:15 +0000</lastBuildDate><generator>locus</generator><description>Thoughts and Resources of the Programming Languages Fuwn Uses</description><link>gemini://fuwn.me/blog/programming_languages</link><atom:link href="gemini://fuwn.me/blog/programming_languages.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><item><description>Golang... Go is quite a funny language to me. I have a hard time taking it seriously, not because of the name, but because of the way it handles. Don't get me wrong, Go is a great tool to have under your belt, but it just feels very... "childish" ... to ME.

Other than the weird chills I get whilst working with it (I just had to get that off my back, for the record), I think Go is a pretty nifty language. Go has the "I can do anything! just not very well..." [0] feeling to it, and it is very much true! I don't write software in Go because it "fast!" or "great on memory!", I write software in Go because it "fast! ...", "to write in!".

[0] Having the aforementioned quality to it is not particularly a bad thing, I think it actually benefits Go!

Now, allow me to list some pros and cons that I have to say about Golang with some things to note while reading:

These are ...

Pros

Reasons for anyone to learn or to use Go!

Cons

Nitpicks, not deal-breakers!

One thing you might see a lot when there is talk about Go is the claim that Go hasn't "found it's niche" or "it has no real purpose". To that I say; Go's niche is it's simplicity, it's ability to introduce someone into the compiled language space, and to develop software with speed.

Who Would I Recommend Go To?

People who...

and dare I say it... anyone!

Resources

golang.org

Writing An Interpreter In Go by Thorsten Ball

Writing A Compiler In Go by Thorsten Ball</description><pubDate>2021. 07. 19.</pubDate><guid>gemini://fuwn.me/blog/programming_languages/go</guid><title>Go</title><link>gemini://fuwn.me/blog/programming_languages/go</link></item><item><title>OCaml</title><link>gemini://fuwn.me/blog/programming_languages/ocaml</link><guid>gemini://fuwn.me/blog/programming_languages/ocaml</guid><pubDate>2021. 07. 23.</pubDate><description>## Resources

OCaml for the Skeptical

Why isn't OCaml more popular?</description></item><item><link>gemini://fuwn.me/blog/programming_languages/rust</link><guid>gemini://fuwn.me/blog/programming_languages/rust</guid><pubDate>2021. 07. 23.</pubDate><description>## Resources

My experience crafting an interpreter with Rust</description><title>Rust</title></item><item><guid>gemini://fuwn.me/blog/programming_languages/forth</guid><title>Forth</title><description>## Resources

Forth Interest Group Home Page

Forth

the Forth Net

Links to Forth Programs

Docker images for popular Forth systems

ForthWorks (HTTP)

ForthWorks (Gemini)

ForthWorks (Gopher)</description><pubDate>2022. 04. 21.</pubDate><link>gemini://fuwn.me/blog/programming_languages/forth</link></item></channel></rss>

Proxy Information
Original URL
gemini://fuwn.me/blog/programming_languages.xml
Status Code
Success (20)
Meta
text/rss+xml; charset=utf-8; lang=en
Capsule Response Time
44.200986 milliseconds
Gemini-to-HTML Time
0.182672 milliseconds

This content has been proxied by September (dc6ae).