Home
---------------------------------------- ada March 02nd, 2019 ---------------------------------------- I must be 30% magpie or something because I can't steer clear of shiny new things no matter how hard I try. In this case, the shiny "new" thing isn't so new at all, but is a programming language from 1980 (when I was born). Ada [0] is a brilliant language. It's incredibly simple, syntactically, but also extremely powerful. It makes conscious decisions to forgo speed and brevity in exchange for safety and clarity. It is cautious where other languages are bold. Here's a "hello, world" example: with Ada.Text_IO; procedure Hello is use Ada.Text_IO; begin Put_Line("Hello, World!"); end Hello; Everything is spelled out. Every instruction ends with a semicolon, everything is case insensitive, variables must be declared between the "is" and "begin" of a procedure. Every beginning has an explicit end, which is labeled. It's so ridiculously cautious! I told ~ben the other day that it's the Tigran Petrosian [1] of programming languages. The whole mentality is so neat to me. There's a lot of languages out there and I don't need to learn this one. While it's true that I haven't kept up with any systems-programming languages it's not really a gap in my knowledge. It's just that I have no need of them since I don't do that type of work. So why learn something that's best suited to massive government builds? Cause FUCK YOU, I wanna! Look forward to seeing a bunch of shell work done in Ada in the near future. I was going to make Cosmic Voyage's web generation script in python instead of continuing to grow the massive /bin/sh script, but maybe I'll tackle it in Ada instead. Has anyone out there ever used it for web programming before? That tickles me pink! Anywho, any of you know and use Ada? I learned the basics in college but have never done anything worth a damn in it. I found a bunch of resources online including a standards site with the most Orwellian name ever: Ada Conformity Assessment Authority [2]. Hah! So badass. They're serious about following conventions with it, which really makes sense for the applications it serves. PEP8 is similar for python. If you feel like diving in with me, here's a link to a crash-course in the form of a ~40pg PDF [3]. I'm going to store my practice programs and notes in a git repo [4]. Now, lets see if I can do this without cutting into my Icelandic practice, or my writing on this phlog, or on Cosmic Voyage, or my preparations for the upcoming move, or planning my wife's 50th birthday party (SEEEECRET) or any of the other things that are actually important which I should be focusing on instead. - xoxo, magpie TEXT [0] Ada (programming language) TEXT [1] Tigran Petrosian HTML [2] Ada 2012 Language Reference Manual HTML [3] Ada Crash Course HTML [4] tomasino's ada practice repo