Although, i would agree with it not necessarily being “friendly”, since its a drastically different syntax than many beginners would be used to, the brackets and parenthesis here are not what you think they are.
Unison is a language in the style of Haskell, F#, Purescript, Elm, etc. So that first line is actually type annotations.
In Haskell, this would just be helloWorld ::IO() , meaning a function named “helloWorld” with no arguments and produces what is essentally a potentially-unsafe IO action with a Void return (the empty parenthesis () ).
Here in Unison they call the bracket part “abilities” or something. Its saying the same thing as Haskell, but being more explicit in saying it can raise an exception.
Yeah sorry - that’s just unnecessarily obtuse. Programming languages just don’t need to be that convoluted. Hello world should look something like this:
print("Hello, World!")
And when you need more complexity, it can still be far simpler than Unison (or Haskel). For example this (in Swift):
Hello world should look something like this: print("Hello, World"!)
You don’t need the annotation line in Haskell-esque languages, most of the time. Without the annotation, this is Hello World in Haskell:
main = print "Hello, World!"
And when you need more complexity, it can still be far simpler than Unison (or Haskell)
import qualified Data.List as List
import Data.Function ((&))
processNumbers numbers =
let
isEven n = mod n 2 == 0
in
numbers
& List.filter isEven
& List.map (^2)
main =
processNumbers [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
& print
It’s not parenthesis (in the PEMDAS sense), it’s the unit type and it’s normally expressed like that. If you’re not familiar with type systems, it’s the typing equivalent of void.
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Although, i would agree with it not necessarily being “friendly”, since its a drastically different syntax than many beginners would be used to, the brackets and parenthesis here are not what you think they are.
Unison is a language in the style of Haskell, F#, Purescript, Elm, etc. So that first line is actually type annotations.
In Haskell, this would just be
helloWorld :: IO ()
, meaning a function named “helloWorld” with no arguments and produces what is essentally a potentially-unsafe IO action with a Void return (the empty parenthesis () ).Here in Unison they call the bracket part “abilities” or something. Its saying the same thing as Haskell, but being more explicit in saying it can raise an exception.
Yeah sorry - that’s just unnecessarily obtuse. Programming languages just don’t need to be that convoluted. Hello world should look something like this:
print("Hello, World!")
And when you need more complexity, it can still be far simpler than Unison (or Haskel). For example this (in Swift):
func processNumbers(_ numbers: [Int]) -> [Int] { return numbers.filter { $0 % 2 == 0 }.map { $0 * $0 } } let numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] let processedNumbers = processNumbers(numbers) print(processedNumbers)
You don’t need the annotation line in Haskell-esque languages, most of the time. Without the annotation, this is Hello World in Haskell:
What do you mean by flipped? Parentheses seem to group expressions like in most languages.
It’s not parenthesis (in the PEMDAS sense), it’s the unit type and it’s normally expressed like that. If you’re not familiar with type systems, it’s the typing equivalent of
void
.deleted by creator
I’m not sure what you’re asking. Plenty of modern languages use the unit type; typescript, Rust, not sure you consider Haskell a modern language.
From the look of it, this language seems to use it in a function signature declaration, which would make sense.