essays about the act and art of programming
TODO programming tax
higher level languages are built to help the programmer focus on higher level ideas, protecting them from thinking about memory permissions, etc. this is the case most of the time but all abstractions are at some point leaky given our finite access to memory and compute.
javascript does not accomplish this; it merely shifts the responsibilities of the programmer operating at lower levels of abstraction from thinking about pointers, memory mapping, etc. to thinking about undefined, NaN and object comparisons instead .
proper abstraction enables the programmer to think at a higher level; javascript comes close before dragging the developer down with it
macro notes
haskell doesnt work macros involve evaluation: running program at compile time requires running language inside compiler places burden inside of language implementation to make life tricky erlang vm has always supported continuously evaluating new code, unlike haskell, which has to have a very strange embedded interpreter to work properly! ghc templates might work better with better multi stage compilation?
macros in ruby are interesting: https://www.toptal.com/ruby/ruby-metaprogramming-cooler-than-it-sounds
- public document at doc.anagora.org/metaprogramming
- video call at meet.jit.si/metaprogramming