I'm always dabbling in any number of things, but a couple I want to pay some specific attention to in the near future:
1. Prolog: this has been an ongoing interest for a while, but some things I've been diving into lately have led me back to focusing on logic programming again.
2. Go: because some projects (like ollama, etc) that I'm interested in possibly hacking on, are written in Go.
3. A lisp (whether that be Clojure, CL, Guile, whateve) - just because.
I’m currently learning Rust. I have a good grasp of the basics, but I’m struggling to use third-party libraries that either do not expose traits that I need, or objects provided by the library have a lifetime that conflicts with lifetimes within my code.
If anyone has any good resources for learning Rust at an intermediate level, I’d appreciate it.
I've been looking forward to picking up Rust for a couple of years now, and this past month finally got a chance to write a little utility program with it. Perhaps next year I will get to do some more.
C and C#, possibly Go (one of C# or Go based on jobs).
Learning C via "C Programming: A modern approach" to have a deeper understanding of memory management, stack/heap, lifetimes, pointers, low-level etc
Learning C# for my career, and to get more familiar with SOLID, OOP, Backend coming from TypeScript/Python
In 2025 I plan to try either C++ or Rust for graphics programming
I'm always dabbling in any number of things, but a couple I want to pay some specific attention to in the near future:
1. Prolog: this has been an ongoing interest for a while, but some things I've been diving into lately have led me back to focusing on logic programming again.
2. Go: because some projects (like ollama, etc) that I'm interested in possibly hacking on, are written in Go.
3. A lisp (whether that be Clojure, CL, Guile, whateve) - just because.
I’m currently learning Rust. I have a good grasp of the basics, but I’m struggling to use third-party libraries that either do not expose traits that I need, or objects provided by the library have a lifetime that conflicts with lifetimes within my code.
If anyone has any good resources for learning Rust at an intermediate level, I’d appreciate it.
Nothing new. I am focusing on a deeper understanding of what I already use most: Go, Python, JavaScript, TypeScript.
I've been looking forward to picking up Rust for a couple of years now, and this past month finally got a chance to write a little utility program with it. Perhaps next year I will get to do some more.
If I were in the market to learn another language, I'd go for C++
erlang? awesome threading model
Embracing tradition and becoming a C master.
rust Go
i'm just tyring to find a cool db. surreal fucked us on 2.x