| Very interesting, and thanks for answering. Could I ask what kind of project it is? I wonder if I'm just lucky that Clojure fits perfectly my use case, which is mostly a set of distributed systems of all kinds. So while as a whole there's tens of thousands of LOC. The components have very strong boundaries being as it's a set of services assembled together through RPC, PubSubs and DBs. Maybe that alleviate the lack of a static type checker. We've adopted Clojure about 3 years ago, team of 10. We've had a few people leave and join throughout. Only one person knew Clojure beforehand. Our stack is about 50% Clojure, 40% Java and 10% Scala. Of all three, Clojure has given us the least issues, has been pretty easy to maintain and generally has fewer defects. Java tend to have the most bugs, almost always related to some shared state. Scala I find the hardest to extend and maintain, but the code base we have for it I think does Scala wrong, it's like the worst mix of OOP and FP. > I dream of a statically typed Clojure with type inference, spec-inferred types and optional dynamic typing for REPL experimentation and glue code That's pretty much exactly core.typed: https://blog.ambrosebs.com/2018/09/20/towards-typed-clj.html That said, the project never managed to get more contributors. If you're looking for a typed Lisp, I've been keeping my eyes out on Carp: https://github.com/carp-lang/Carp |
Don’t get me wrong, if I restarted the project again from scratch, I’d choose the same setup (or a very similar one). I love Clojure and am very productive in it, but that doesn’t mean I don’t think it could be better still.
> That's pretty much exactly core.typed
I haven’t looked at it in a couple of years, maybe its changed, but when I did, it didn’t really do it for me. It’s still a separate tool that lives separate from Clojure itself and it felt very “heavy”. In my personal opinion and experience, having certain things as separate entities (decomplected as Rich would say) isn’t always a good thing and leads to an inferior thing. I’ve played around with many programming languages in my time (I’m a bit of an enthusiast, I guess. I like trying out languages that are very different from what I already know – that’s how I originally got into Clojure) and it seems like a common theme. The closer a feature is to the compiler/runtime, the better it works and seamless it is over all. Another Clojure example is the limitations core.async has, because its an external library: things like <! cannot be placed inside functions or the go macro can’t see it to transform it as macros cannot look inside function calls. I’ve also encountered an exception recently where the stacktrace only showed core.async and clojure.core code, not a single stack frame referenced MY source files. These problems are hard to solve as an external library.
> If you’re looking for a typed Lisp
I’m not. I like Clojure’s particular mix of sensible syntax, immutability, sequence abstraction and general way of doing things. Other Lisps I’ve looked at don’t have the same emphasis on these things as Clojure does, so I don’t want another Lisp, I want a language that makes the exact same decisions and tradeoffs as Clojure, except on dynamic vs static types (and actually useful error messages). Maybe one day I’ll give it a try, I certainly don’t expect Cognitect to change their language because of what my preferences are.