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by latch
463 days ago
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Author here. I agree this is a less-than captivating piece. I write a lot about Zig and wanted something I could reference from other pieces. But, to answer your question directly: absolutely. In addition to writing a lot about it, I maintain some popular libraries and lurk in various communities. Let me assure you, beginner memory-related questions come up _all the time_. I'd break them down into three groups: 1 - Young developers who might have a bit of experience in JavaScript or python. Not sure how they're finding their way to Zig. Maybe from HN, maybe to do game development. I think some come to Zig specifically to learn this kind of stuff (I've always believed most programmers should know C. Learning Zig gets you the same fundamentals, and has a lot of QoL stuff). 2 - Hobbyist. Often python developers, often doing embedded stuff. Might be looking to write extensions in Zig (versus having to do it in C). 3 - Old programmers who have been using higher level languages for _decades_ and need a refresher. Hey, that's me! |
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Also, from learning human languages, it's a well-known lesson that phrasebook-type "this means this" translations (like some here are asking, from Zig to C/Rust) are useful for quick and dirty learning good enough for one trip, but long term learning needs this kind of a direct explanation.
1. It avoids the word (or syntax in this case) getting stuck in a double-indirection state, needing you to mentally translate it from Zig to C to what it actually means every time.
2. It avoids the learner attaching the wrong nuances to the word or syntax feature, based on the translation they're given, when the language they're learning has different nuances. In other words, it helps the learner see it as its own thing, and not be unduly colored by what they already know and find easy to grasp on to (even when it's subtly wrong).