←back to thread

296 points gyre007 | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
_han ◴[] No.21281004[source]
The top comment on YouTube raises a valid point:

> I've programmed both functional and non-functional (not necessarily OO) programming languages for ~2 decades now. This misses the point. Even if functional programming helps you reason about ADTs and data flow, monads, etc, it has the opposite effect for helping you reason about what the machine is doing. You have no control over execution, memory layout, garbage collection, you name it. FP will always occupy a niche because of where it sits in the abstraction hierarchy. I'm a real time graphics programmer and if I can't mentally map (in rough terms, specific if necessary) what assembly my code is going to generate, the language is a non-starter. This is true for any company at scale. FP can be used at the fringe or the edge, but the core part demands efficiency.

replies(29): >>21281094 #>>21281291 #>>21281346 #>>21281363 #>>21281366 #>>21281483 #>>21281490 #>>21281516 #>>21281702 #>>21282026 #>>21282130 #>>21282232 #>>21283002 #>>21283041 #>>21283257 #>>21283351 #>>21283424 #>>21283461 #>>21285789 #>>21285877 #>>21285892 #>>21285914 #>>21286539 #>>21286651 #>>21287177 #>>21287195 #>>21288087 #>>21288669 #>>21347699 #
1. scarejunba ◴[] No.21286651[source]
After Minecraft, none of this makes any sense anymore. That is a genre-defining cultural masterpiece and runs on the JVM which is fosbury-flopping all over your registers on purpose. And everyone used to repeat some folk wisdom about Java back then.