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Futhark by example

I was so confused by the word factorial in the first example for a language, but decided to click it and just see what it means

Turns out, Futhark != https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Futhark (runes, old germanic alphabet)

That's like calling your programming language Latin?! The title could use some disambiguation...

2 hours agolucb1e

Futhark is really such a great idea. I'm not convinced that dependent types are worth the cognitive overhead in general, but it's definitely worth it to include the length as part of the type information for dynamic arrays, e.g.:

  concat(Vec<T, n>, Vec<T, m>) -> Vec<T, n+m>
  matmul(Mat<T, n, m>, Mat<T, m, l>) -> Mat<T, n, l>
  head(Vec<T, n+1>) -> (T, Vec<T, n>)
This would have saved me so much headache debugging CUDA kernels and numpy!! I wish it were a first-class feature in those frameworks, and even general-purpose languages, but alas.
10 hours agoethanlipson

Here they are in Futhark:

    val concat [n] [m] 't : (xs: [n]t) -> (ys: [m]t) -> *[n + m]t
    val matmul [n] [m] [l] 't : (xs: [n][m]t) -> (ys: [m][l]t) -> *[n][l]t
    val head [n] 't : (x: [n]t) -> t
And here's the pathological case (length cannot be determined at compile time):

    val filter [n] 'a : (p: a -> bool) -> (as: [n]a) -> *[]a
Other pathological cases include conditionals and loops.
6 hours agoitishappy

You can do this with templates in C++ and generics in Rust I'm pretty sure. I think the Eigen C++ library supports this. (I have yet to do a linear algebra heavy Rust project, so I can't speak to the options that exist there.)

9 hours agoVorpalWay

I'm talking about cases where the array size is not known at compile time. For example, say the user passes in a list of numbers as command line arguments. Then we have

  argv: Vec<String, argc>
If I want to map these to ints, then I'd like a compile-time guarantee that the resulting array

  nums: Vec<Int, argc>
is the same length as argv. Lean and Idris can do this, but AFAIK no commonly used languages can. But unlike general dependent types, these are not hard to wrap one's head around and would save a lot of frustration, in my experience.
7 hours agoethanlipson

Yeah, C++ arrays are literally that.

8 hours agootabdeveloper4

Arrays are not dynamically sized though (handling runtime sizes) and don’t have efficient append/concat. The point of the dependent types is that you can have the type system track that concat creates an M+N length vector, sort preserves length (and adds a sorted guarantee that slice preserves), etc. Sure you can do a lot with templates, but that’s advanced templates not just “C++ arrays” in a throwaway “literally that” way.

8 hours agoalpinisme
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8 hours ago

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an hour agogobdovan

It would be nice to not name your language after another language. (Yes I know it's a script, that doesn't change my point). I came here expecting something else.

9 hours agoFerret7446

Yeah, when naming your language, it's important to keep mind the expectations of people seeing headlines about articles about your language on blog aggregation sites :^)

Now I'm thinking about "Smalltalk by Example" and "Slang by Example"

6 hours agohmry

Jackson Crawford's youtube channel is very helpful academic source.

For those that don't know, Futhark is comes from the first 6 letters of the runic alphabet (F, U, Þ, A, R, K)

https://www.youtube.com/@JacksonCrawford

8 hours agojgrowl

Same here, I was very confused for a bit.

6 hours agofinaard

Was expecting to see some examples of how to read runes, but I am nonetheless equally satisfied.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elder_Futhark

6 hours agoantran22

Futhark is pretty great! And I have to say that the maintainer is insanely quick. It has happened on more than one occasion that I reported a bug and it's solved within the day. I have been using Futhark in prod for two years now and never had serious problems.

10 hours agorowanG077

Interesting, what do use it for if you can share?

9 hours agokeyle

Optimization algorithms. The build in automatic differentiation is great!.

8 hours agorowanG077

What is your use case?

9 hours agoReefersleep

Futhark is a glimmer of light in the wasteland of C/C++ styled low level GPU languages.

8 hours agofulafel

We also need to have StarLisp back, it would be quite fitting.

4 hours agopjmlp

Couldn’t have chosen a more difficult (and ambiguous) name to pronounce, could you? It almost sounds like a curse that I often hear people say out in the bad streets of New York City.

8 hours agoguessmyname