I'm always dabbling in any number of things, but a couple I want to pay some specific attention to in the near future:
1. Prolog: this has been an ongoing interest for a while, but some things I've been diving into lately have led me back to focusing on logic programming again.
2. Go: because some projects (like ollama, etc) that I'm interested in possibly hacking on, are written in Go.
3. A lisp (whether that be Clojure, CL, Guile, whateve) - just because.
I’m currently learning Rust. I have a good grasp of the basics, but I’m struggling to use third-party libraries that either do not expose traits that I need, or objects provided by the library have a lifetime that conflicts with lifetimes within my code.
If anyone has any good resources for learning Rust at an intermediate level, I’d appreciate it.
Fun to try a bit different (not too far out and are Go and C alternatives), that also are languages with some potential, and not get trapped in the corporate usual (C# and JavaScript, looking at you).
I've been looking forward to picking up Rust for a couple of years now, and this past month finally got a chance to write a little utility program with it. Perhaps next year I will get to do some more.
1. Prolog: this has been an ongoing interest for a while, but some things I've been diving into lately have led me back to focusing on logic programming again.
2. Go: because some projects (like ollama, etc) that I'm interested in possibly hacking on, are written in Go.
3. A lisp (whether that be Clojure, CL, Guile, whateve) - just because.