I’ve been researching programming languages to find a good, high level language that compiles to a single binary that is preferably pretty small. After tons of research, I landed on Nim and used it to make a quick txt parser for a project I’m doing.

Nim seems absolutely fantastic. Despite being sold as a systems programming language, it feels like Python without any of its drawbacks (it’s fast, statically typed, etc.) - and the text parser I made is only a 50kb binary!

Has anyone here tried Nim? What’s your experience with it? Are there any hidden downsides aside from being kinda unpopular?


Bonus: I want to give a shoutout to how easy it is to open a text file and parse it line-by-line in this language. Look at how simple and elegant this syntax is:

import os

if paramCount() == 0:
  quit("No file given as argument", 1)

let filepath = paramStr(1)

if not fileExists(filepath):
  quit("File not found: " & filepath, 1)

for line in lines(filepath):
  echo line
  • atzanteol@sh.itjust.works
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    3 days ago

    It solved a problem that didn’t exist and created problems that hadn’t previously existed.

    There’s a reason every python “intro” begins with “spend 20 minutes setting up an editor to deal with whitespace” properly.

    It makes moving code harder. It makes jumping around code blocks harder. Often the ide can help but sometimes it can’t.

    In any curly-brace language these are things I simply don’t need to even think about. But in Python it’s a pain.

    Yes it’s not the end of the world. Yes I can spend hours fine-tuning my editor. But… Why should I even have to? Why create these hurdles for no gain?

    • BackgrndNoize@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      20 mins setting up an editor, lol what fantasy world are you living in, I’ve been using Python for years never had to do much other than install some VScode extensions

    • sirdorius@programming.dev
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      3 days ago

      No clue what you’re talking about honestly. I’ve worked on a 7 million line python codebase, and while python had tons of issues, whitespace was not one of them. You can easily move things around and have never seen a bug due to bad indentation.

    • bitcrafter@programming.dev
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      3 days ago

      I spend a huge amount of time working with Python and regularly do things like refactoring and do not run into all of this pain that supposedly exists, and never have. I think that you should stop speaking on behalf of “everyone”.

          • atzanteol@sh.itjust.works
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            3 days ago

            The best argument I’ve heard for whitespace blocking is “it’s not that bad when you get your text editor configured”. That’s an excuse, not a reason.

            • hikaru755@lemmy.world
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              2 days ago

              Idk know what editor you’re using, but it worked perfectly fine out of the box with IntelliJ. Nothing compared to the hassle of setting up a proper Eslint setup for typescript, honestly.

              And I’m not trying to defend python here, I don’t touch that language except under duress, and I do prefer C-style code blocks as well. But this is kind of a pointless argument.

            • bitcrafter@programming.dev
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              3 days ago

              A text editor that indents a block when you press “tab” is not hard to find and takes all of 30 seconds to set up.