Doing some daily questions leading up to the event to encourage some activity here, starting off with language selection
I’m going to try Lean4. It’s interesting for us at work, for gamedev, and I’m personally interested in it too.
It’s not only a programming language, but also a theorem prover, and the boundaries between those two aspects are rather blurry. For instance,
if
does not take a Boolean as argument, but aDecideable
logical proposition.if
also does not only choose which branch to evaluate, but also offers a proof that the proposition is True or False in the respective branches, that one can later use to argue with the compiler if a certain function call is allowed or not (for instance, one can make a type that only contains natural numbers that are prime - and making an instance of that type requires a proof that the passed in number is indeed prime - and such a proof can be materialized usingif
).I’m still learning the language though, and am not certain if I can finish reading the book Functional Progrmaming in Lean till AoC starts… If I can’t manage, I’m just going to start AoC in Lean anyhow, and see how far I get.
Dang, haven’t heard of this, looks pretty cool!
Probably rust, so I can push myself to do some real practice with it.
Factor, for sure. But I’ll be surprised if I get though the whole first week without falling behind.
I often pick languages or modules to learn for the easier puzzles, or even languages that should be hard too challenge myself. 2 years ago I used bash and CLI apps for the first five levels. And I’ve forced myself to get better at numpy and pandas too before I knew then as well.
TLDR: user it as an opportunity to learn.
I’m going to use https://harelang.org to get more comfortable in it, and maybe my own languages, Otomescript and Hase.
I’m going for zig and gerbil this year! Love AOC for learning new langs a day at a time :)
Wait when is it.
starts december 1st
Python since its the only language im half decent at