Sky – an Elm-inspired language that compiles to Go (github.com)

102 points by whalesalad 6 hours ago

29 comments:

by taolson 12 minutes ago

Nice to see another language with Haskell / Miranda type syntax, but the vibe-coded implementation sure shows: e.g. src/Compiler/Infer.sky isUpperStart:

    isUpperStart : String -> Bool
    isUpperStart name =
        case String.slice 0 1 name of
            
            "A" ->
                True
            
            "B" ->
                True
            
            "C" ->
                True
        ... for 23 more cases.
And the corresponding go code in the bootstrap compiler is even worse.
by melodyogonna 3 hours ago

That's two new languages compiling to Go making HN frontpage in as many days. It seems people like everything about Go except the language itself. Me? I like everything about Go including the language, these transpiled languages are interesting though.

But I keep wondering if they could integrate at a lower-level than the source code. Like how JVM languages integrate at the bytecode level, or LLVM languages at the LLVM level

by MichaelNolan 2 hours ago

> But I keep wondering if they could integrate at a lower-level than the source code.

I’m sure they could, but targeting go source code has the benefit of giving early adopters an escape hatch. If it targeted LLVM directly, I would never consider using this at work since the risk of it being abandoned is too high. But since it targets go source, I would perhaps consider it for some low importance projects at work.

by seabrookmx 17 minutes ago

The standard go toolchain doesn't use LLVM. Go has its own assembly format and machine code generation.

by nu11ptr 33 minutes ago

> But I keep wondering if they could integrate at a lower-level than the source code.

Unfortunately nothing below source code level is stable, so they would constantly be chasing changes after any Go release. I personally wish they would focus on making it accessible, as Go actually has a nice runtime and would make a good language target.

by onlyrealcuzzo an hour ago

What was the other one?

I'm working on a language that transpiles to Zig with a custom Go-like runtime (and no garbage collector, Rust-style Affine movement instead).

Sky seems quite cool, as it's additive to Go in interesting ways.

I originally considered keeping the GC and just transpiling to Go so I didn't need to write a Runtime.

Go rules! It really does. But I HATE writing/reading Go.

So I'm glad more people are doing this!

by styluss an hour ago
by onlyrealcuzzo 6 minutes ago

Awesome, this is very close to what I originally considered.

by ksec 2 hours ago

If we think of Go as different kind of C, then having Go as a compiled target seems to make sense as C is a compiled target.

by librasteve 17 minutes ago

Very cool.

I am comparing this https://github.com/anzellai/sky#tea-architecture with this https://harcstack.org (my thing) ... guess I have some work to do ;-)

by 1-more an hour ago

I will add this to my list of Elm-inspired tools that call to mind Brian Eno's quip about the first Velvet Underground album: "I think everyone who bought one of those 30,000 copies started a band!" With Elm it feels like it's 1% of Elm users creating a language.

https://quoteinvestigator.com/2016/03/01/velvet/

by zem 3 hours ago

at first glance this looks amazing! basically provides everything I have ever wanted in a full stack language. looking forward to experimenting with it.

edit: looking through the docs/examples some more, it looks like javascript interop is fairly clunky, both because it relies on string concatenation to embed fragments of javascript, and because the string concatenation syntax is not great (and the formatter makes it even worse - see the example at https://github.com/anzellai/sky/blob/main/examples/13-skysho...)

I would encourage you to at the least add multiline strings with interpolation support, and ideally add a small compiler for html literals.

by skybrian 3 hours ago

Functional languages have some good and some bad features and there's no reason to copy them all. For example, you don't need to have a Hindley-Milner type system (bidirectional is better) or currying just because it's a functional language.

by troupo 2 hours ago

We need more pragmatic languages. E.g. Erlang and Elixir are functional, but eschew all the things FP purists advocate for (complex type systems, purity, currying by default etc.)

by zem an hour ago

ocaml has a complex type system but it's also very pragmatic in that it doesn't force you into any one paradigm, you can do whatever works best in a given situation. (scala arguably goes further in the "do whatever you want" direction but it also dials the complexity way up)

by troupo 41 minutes ago

Yes! Completely forgot about OCaml because I only spent a couple of months with it

by __natty__ 39 minutes ago

I would love to see Java inspired language compiled to Go. I really like Go portability and standard library and Java... verbosity. I prefer explicit names, types and all the syntax around that. Graalvm is not an answer for me because as far as I'm aware it doesn't support cross-compile.

by harikb an hour ago

Somewhat unrelated to the language itself:

> The compiler bootstraps through 3+ generations of self-compilation.

I guess it applies to any language compiler, but f you are self-hosting, you will naturally release binary packages. Please make sure you have enough support behind the project to setup secure build pipeline. As a user, we will never be able to see something even one nesting-level up.

by onlyrealcuzzo an hour ago

First - awesome job. Congrats. Self hosting is an accomplishment!

But I'm curious to get your thoughts on the process in hindsight.

I understand why it's valuable: to cast a wide net in catching bugs and give a good signal that your language is generally "ready".

I'm working on a similar language, but worried about going down the self-hosting path, as I think it'd slow me down rather than speed me up.

How did it work for you?

by submain 2 hours ago

Great work :). Go doesn't have TCO. That means functional languages (no for loops) could blow up the stack. How did you solve that?

by kubb an hour ago

You can just compile any tail recursive function to a function with a loop and no recursion.

by 1-more an hour ago

This is in fact how Elm does it! Tail call recursion compiles to a while loop.

by ch4s3 34 minutes ago

If you allow FFI are you really inspired by Elm? ;)

by redoh 2 hours ago

Elm's type system and architecture are genuinely pleasant to work with, so seeing those ideas ported to a Go compilation target is interesting. You get the safety and expressiveness of Elm but end up with a Go binary you can deploy anywhere. I wonder how the error messages compare, since that was always one of Elm's strongest features.

by mrichman 43 minutes ago

Compiles to Go or transpiles to Go?

by farfatched 39 minutes ago

Either is fine.

``Formally speaking, "Transpiler" is a useless word''

https://people.csail.mit.edu/rachit/post/transpiler-formal/

by 9rx 31 minutes ago

You are free to use whatever word you want. Even "bloopydoopy", if you so wish. But "compiles" is best.

by tasuki 2 hours ago

A bit too bleeding edge for me, but it does look super nice (ie exactly like Elm).

by riclib 3 hours ago

Can’t wait to play with it. Great design!

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