Spyke

Replies

Comment on

Which language you wish would really grow and reach mainstream adoption?

I would like to see Ada grow. Its clean syntax, rich expressive capabilities, and early error detection by the compiler due to strict typing create a very pleasant experience during development. This year, the language got a new standard. Recently, a package manager and a community index were created. There's an extension/LSP for vscode, etc. Along with great educational materials on learn.adacore.com, it's easy to pick up and start using this language.

PS I created a community on p.d two days ago: https://programming.dev/c/ada

#adalang

ada

Comment on

Welcome to Ada 83 Memory site

Reply in thread

Ada is good at compiling files separately. Slowdowns can occur in name resolution, for example in the statement Proc (Fun_1 (Fun_2 (Fun_3 (Fun_4 (Var))))); if you have function names overloaded, the number of combinations the compiler has to consider grows exonentially with the number of nesting levels. So it may take time to find the right combination. I think the Ada 83 compilers were slow because of their experimental status, when the authors tried to implement all the features of the language without worrying about performance. The computer capabilities of those years were minuscule.

In this frontend, they stored the parse tree in the file system: Diana

You reached the end