Last year I used mainly crystal. This year I’m thinking pharo smalltalk, if I can pick it up in time
I also want to do visualizations, not sure how possible that is with smalltalk.
I always use Rust, because I cannot use it at work and I am still bad with it.
New Years resolution the past 5 years: I will get better with Rust.
…and I do get better but somehow it always feels like it’s not enough. Like, I’m still an imposter.
I can program an entire embedded USB keyboard/mouse firmware from scratch that can do all sorts of things no keyboard has ever done before yet I still feel like a newbie somehow. Like there’s all these people that talk about traits and mutli-threaring with async and GPU and AI stuff and I’m like, “I wrote an embedded_hal crate that lets you use both 8 and 16-channel multiplexers simultaneously!” or, “I wrote an interface that let’s you use the extra space in your RP2040 flash memory as a filesystem!”
Yet everything I ever write in Rust always just uses the most basic and simple features because I still have trouble with complex lifetimes (passing them around quickly gets too confusing for me) and traits that work with non-basic types (because in the world of embedded
'static
is king).Good news: if you’re writing #Rust and only using basic features of the language, you’re doing it right.
People who use the advanced stuff either have unique, interesting challenges, or they’re over-engineering. Since the former are overrepresented in the blogosphere, you’re probably comparing yourself to them. But just because their problems are interesting doesn’t mean yours are not! Nor does it mean you have to use the same solutions.
If you can solve interesting problems (it sounds like you can!) and keep the code simple, more power to you!
Maybe you should work more on you self-esteem instead of rust?
Doesn’t seem healthy to be good at something and not recognizing it as an accomplishment.
Haha, well… I have plenty of self-esteem but not Rust-specific self-esteem. I still have imposter syndrome with that language.
I’m a top notch expert in Python and JS though! 😁👍
I wrote PyMinifier which required such a deep understanding of Python it kinda broke my brain writing it for a while, haha. I eventually figured everything out though and got an even deeper understanding of the language and its features.
For JS it has just been years and years and years of knowing 100 ways to do what I want in JS but none ever seeming to be, “correct”. Then eventually I realized there’s no best way to do basically anything in JS and that’s when the true enlightenment came 🤣
If you look at anyone’s JS code and think to yourself, “ugh, there’s got to be a better way to do this” chances are you’re wrong. All the ways will be equally shitty for any number of different reasons! 😆
I am glad to hear that :) I have friends who don’t cherish their accomplishments so maybe I was just in that headspace. Sorry for assuming.
Yeah, I started to learn to code with JS and the whole thing seemed to be, and I don’t intent to be insulting, amateurish. Not something I would expected from engineers who try to be efficient and pride themselves with that.
Kinda lost interest in the whole thing because everything seemed so needlessly complicated and fast changing.
But a few weeks ago I started to pick up rust and it seems to have a lot more thought put into it.
The installation process is straight forward, the compiler pretty much tells you what you did wrong, tools are easy to set up and the name of the language is cool^^
fast changing
This happens because JS is such a shit language! There’s no best way (or even good way) to solve any given problem. This results in everyone reinventing the wheel every goddamned day.
Someone like you and me thinks to themselves, “this is such crap!” And they’re right! 🤣 So they come up with a new way of doing things that’s just a little bit better and they post it publicly.
Then some huge amount of new JS developers (there’s always a steady stream) and a few old ones think, “hey, this isn’t a bad idea!” So they start using the new thing. Then it becomes the hot new thing and suddenly huge amounts of JS code is depending on it.
Then people start to realize that this new way doesn’t quite work so well in certain situations so they add on to it by making new utilities/GUI libs. Others see the wisdom in this and adopt these new tools.
These new “solutions” build and grow in complexity until new JS devs working with the new paradigm think, “this is such crap!” And they’re right!
😂
This year I’m thinking of a real challenge and writing brainfuck with butterflies.
Or Rust. Rust is the way.
Real programmers don’t mess time messing around with butterflies or physically interacting with the world. They just intimidate the program into acting as they want through sheer fucking will
I’m going to try with an awful language so I can better criticise it in future.
Java
I will try to learn rust while doing it, seems like an up and coming language with some interesting features.
I never get past the first 10 days anyway due to how long they start to take and how many things are going on in December.
I hate the ones that turn out to require some niche mathematical knowledge too…
I like to use lisp. It is about the only time I get to use it, and I get a little better each year.
Last year i did rust and lisp both, lisp most of the time was easier.
I skipped 2023, but in 2022 I got decently far using newer Excel functions like LET and LAMBDA. And then if I could I would golf the solution into a single cell formula. Years before 2022 I used Python. I think I had more fun with Excel. Will I be up for it this year?
Haskell! Because it fits the way I think nicely, and I don’t want to write in anything else :)
Going with c# again. I know the language super well but don’t often have a chance to get really deep into it with the stuff at work. These often present very non typical problems that require lesser used features.
C# is like a black hole for me. Ever since I started using it, I have been unable to really get into anything else.
If I would have learned it later, I could have learned five other languages instead ( really learned, I have still played with a bunch ).
I’d advise to pick up at least a second language for your non-critical projects. At first it feels so uncomfortable, but as you gain proficiency, you’ll see it’s a real ego boost. You realise that there really isn’t anything you can’t learn.
Thinking of using nim again like last year
Whitespace
Portuguese and Gleam.
Probably start with Rust again this year, although it definitely makes some of the days a lot harder. I might switch to something better for quick code if I fall too far behind.
I might even try PHP - I coded it professionally at the start of my career but haven’t touched it for a decade and I’m curious to know if its improvements make it pleasant to use.
6502 machine code
On real hardware?
It’ll definitely be running on hardware
Go. I actually I haven’t written a single line of Go since last year’s AoC so it’s a good excuse to go again (pun intended).
Might finally do something with Elixir. Plenty of ideas for using it with Phoenix and while I’ve seen a couple of tutorials for simple stuff like a live chat, I’ve done fuck-all thus far.
Might try V one way or another as well. Super small compiler and very small executables make me happy.