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Shenandoah national park. A new garbage collector by Red Hat is named after it. No garbage to see here!Way back in 2016 I wrote about garbage collection theory and my views on how the Go garbage collector was being marketed. In the years since there have been some good advances in the field of garbage collection, and we’re well on the way to seeing GC finally disappear as a problem. The advance I
Something is going on. The people are unhappy. The spectre of civil unrest stalks our programming communities. For the first time, a meaningful number of developers are openly questioning the web platform. Here’s a representative article and discussion. Here’s another. Yet another. I could list more but if you’re interested enough in programming to be reading this you’ve already read at least one
You can find discussions on Hacker News and Reddit I’ve seen a bunch of articles lately which promote the Go language’s latest garbage collector in ways that trouble me. Some of these articles come from the Go project itself. They make claims that imply a radical breakthrough in GC technology has occurred. Here is the initial announcement of a new collector in August 2015: Go is building a garbage
A frequent question about Kotlin is if/when it will support compilation to native binaries that run without a JVM. Usually this takes the form of a more technical question like, “will the Kotlin compiler get an LLVM backend?” I am not on the JetBrains team and I believe they’ve already made up their minds to do this, but I don’t personally think this feature would be the best way to solve the prob
Since the dawn of computing our industry has been engaged on a never ending quest to build the perfect language. This quest is difficult: creating a new programming language is a huge task. And too often the act of doing so fractures the programming ecosystem, leading to an endless grind in which basic tools are recreated again and again: compilers, debuggers, HTTP stacks, IDEs, libraries and an e
I’ve spent more than 5 years being a Bitcoin developer. The software I’ve written has been used by millions of users, hundreds of developers, and the talks I’ve given have led directly to the creation of several startups. I’ve talked about Bitcoin on Sky TV and BBC News. I have been repeatedly cited by the Economist as a Bitcoin expert and prominent developer. I have explained Bitcoin to the SEC,
If you use .NET you probably heard about F#, a multi-paradigm but essentially functional programming language for the CLR. And you probably heard good things about it. You may also have heard of Haskell, which is similar. Perhaps you would like languages such as these on the JVM, but with great tool support and without mandating a functional style … just making it available when you want it. The K
Kotlin is a new programming language from JetBrains, the maker of the world’s best IDEs. After much searching, I have settled on it as the programming language I will probably use for the next 5–10 years or so. I like Kotlin a lot and think it will be a very successful project. Someone who saw me using it in my open source work asked me to write about it, so in this article I’ll explain why I thin
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