I have finished #3710: EKR's last lecture.
Whenever I discover something I think I "should" do, I ask myself two questions:
> I like these philosophies, and I generally ask more demanding questions myself
>
> It is really too difficult to break bad habits and develop a good habit.
> Btw, do you have any ideas for balancing your family life, bad emotions, limited time, etc.
> Btw, do you have any ideas for balancing your family life, bad emotions, limited time, etc.
My only advice is to recognize that family matters more than anything.
Edward
Some people say that societal changes are happening too quickly, and there's a need to rapidly acquire new skills.However, some things are not that easy, which causes a lot of anxiety. What is your perspective on this issue?
Some people say that societal changes are happening too quickly, and there's a need to rapidly acquire new skills.However, some things are not that easy, which causes a lot of anxiety. What is your perspective on this issue?Maybe Edward can talk about how to evaluate Rust thing with Leo :-)
Maybe it's just taste :-)
Thanks for your "last" lesson, despite with you interactions after that post you keep teaching us in the community.
Regarding Rust and the oxidation of everything (A.K.A. rewrite it
in Rust) I have found Nim[1] a pretty good language with visible
inspirations on Python (like its syntax) and without over
complications of Rust or Zig, for example the borrow checker (but
Nim's garbage collector can be disabled).
[1] https://nim-lang.org/
I have rewritten some Pharo code in Nim for efficiency purposes
or make some interop between both, because I need functionality
available in Nim but not in Pharo.
Maybe you or other Leonistas would find Nim interesting, in their explorations of other technologies.
Cheers,
Offray
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> Regarding Rust. I have found Nim[1] a pretty good language.
Thanks for the link.
I am converting leoAst.py to Rust because the RustPython project has already done the hard work of converting Python's parser and tokenizer module to Rust. This project has 363 contributors!
Edward
As I'm not making migrations for Python, Nim and now Julia are calling my attention for specific projects/prototypes. But yes, it seems a pretty good project for such migrations and yes, with a lot of heavy lifting already done.
Cheers,
Offray
[Rust] seems a pretty good project for such migrations and yes, with a lot of heavy lifting already done.
So yes, I would use nim if I could.I've just glanced at nim code. "I" instead of "if"??
Also I recently discovered Julia's Pluto[1][1a] and I really like
their focused notebook environment saved in plain text instead of
Jupyter's cumbersome and human unfriendly JSON. A breath of fresh
air, following the steps in human/diff friendly formats for
interactive notebooks of Pharo's Grafoscopio, Elixir's LiveBook or
Clojure's Clerk.
I don't know about Nim's scientific ecosystem (Julia seems better
in that regard). But one of the advantage of novice's mind is that
we can start without the heaviness and even ignore the one related
with popularity of fashion (like the one in Rust these days).
[1] https://cinemaphile.com/watch?v=Rg3r3gG4nQo
[1a] https://plutojl.org/
Cheers,
Offray
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