Blaise – A modern self-hosting zero-legacy Object Pascal compiler targeting QBE (github.com)

48 points by peter_d_sherman 6 hours ago

16 comments:

by ausare 2 hours ago

“ The Object Pascal ecosystem has two options: Embarcadero Delphi (proprietary, Windows-first) and Free Pascal…”

This part isn’t true, for many years now we’ve also had Oxygene - https://www.remobjects.com/elements/oxygene/ (also proprietary)

by pjmlp an hour ago

Which has had a strange relationship with Delphi, for a while they were responsible for Delphi.NET.

by HexDecOctBin 2 hours ago

Does this support declaring variables anywhere (as opposed to only in the beginning of a function)? That was my primary complaint when using Lazarus.

by pjmlp an hour ago

Delphi has allowed this for quite some time.

by vintagedave 15 minutes ago

Yes - OP, you can do this via inline vars and consts:

  begin
    var foo : string := 'hello';
    const c : integer = 5;
    var bar := GetBar(); // type inference even
    
    // and in blocks:
    for var i := low(x) to high(x) do...
  end;
by magicalhippo 3 hours ago

Looks interesting. As someone who's been using Pascal since Turbo Pascal 6, and use Delphi daily at work, I'm not sure I quite get the "COM-style interface GUID" objection. What exactly about it is complex, and how do you implement Supports() without it?

by vintagedave 3 hours ago

Not the OP, but I can answer with an objection to COM-style GUIDs myself. Delphi's interfaces are heavily based around COM, and so you need GUIDs, ARC, etc.

But interfaces as a concept don't require the COM backend. If you want your code to be cleanly separated, but don't want to split ownership/management models* (create/free vs ARC), and have no need for an interface and type identity to be managed outside your code and process (ie no COM), then interfaces that are not tied to ARC, and not tied to COM, give the clean code benefit without the baggage.

[*] People work around this by implementing interfaces from a base class with no-op AddRef/Release methods. But this kinda shows the problem: why is that necessary?

I work with Oxygene which is another modern Pascal -- quite a few new Pascals have popped up recently, I get the sense there's a real desire for something new! Our interfaces can be 'clean' and we support soft interfaces, too.

by magicalhippo 2 hours ago

But you don't need to specify a GUID for an interface in Delphi, and Blaise uses ARC for both objects and interfaces.

by vintagedave an hour ago

True! But here at least Blaise is consistent. It’s not mixing models.

My real wish for Pascal interfaces is that they are pure. Some of that is not bringing in COM stuff (including recounting) because I think memory management is or should be different to interface-based clean coding. Another: In Delphi if you define a property in an interface, you have to bring in the getter and setter too. And that makes them implicitly public / visible (even if the implementing class declares them as private.) And they must be methods, there’s no way to say “read, but I don’t care how” (where Delphi can normally read fields too.) In other words, the semantic of “I want a property with read access” causes the interface contract to define the implementation, including making public the normally private / internal backing.

Whereas what I really want is to declare “property Foo: Integer read;” and the interface requires that is satisfied, but not how. In other words, interfaces are pure - they don’t bring in extra baggage. You can do that in Oxygene.

by magicalhippo 19 minutes ago

Being restricted to COM-style interfaces, so no true properties like you say, that I totally get.

However my question was mostly with the objection against having a GUID, and how Supports() is solved without said GUID, especially since Delphi interfaces doesn't require a GUID in the first place.

by vintagedave 13 minutes ago

I guess the language implementer needs to answer how they implement Supports :)

But within one app, ie not crossing boundaries, perhaps their object model's vtable carries references to the interfaces, so casting of any sort to/from object-interface and interface-to-interface would work, including Supports?

by samuell 3 hours ago

It is a bit curious with the Mojo 1.0 beta coincidence, as Pascal was the other langauge with a highly readable and quite simple language combined with performant compiled code without GC.

What it lacked was a modern compiler and stack. There is FreePascal for sure, and Lazarus is impressive, but it for sure has its baggage.

by vintagedave 2 hours ago

Yeah, Python and Pascal have always felt like they share similar vibes, despite being massively different languages. (Ease of writing, ease of reading, good inbuilts, etc.) Mojo feels like a clean take on similar goals... it's essentially a cleaner Python.

by tomekw 3 hours ago

That’s so great! Thank you!

I wish something like this existed for Ada :)

by dvh 3 hours ago

For me the only reason to use pascal is GUI apps but this doesn't have it.

by superdisk 4 hours ago

Looks cool and does aim to address some of the annoying warts in Pascal. Especially the memory model.

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