|
|
|
|
|
by nikitaga
446 days ago
|
|
I meant FP libraries like Cats Effect / FS2 / ZIO et al. – they don't really do the things that Akka / Pekko is very good at, such as multi-machine parallelism, but the conventional wisdom nowadays seems to be that it's easier to start with those libraries and progress to Pekko if you ever need that, rather than architect the system with Pekko from the start when you don't need its power. I don't know if I personally agree with that, I've had a better experience with Akka (even raw actors) than with FP libraries, but what I mentioned is definitely the general vibe in the publicly active part of the community that's I'm observing. We gotta keep in mind that there are lots of companies and devs that never talk about what they're doing in public, so of course my perception is biased by that. My own expertise is shifting more and more to the frontend / Scala.js these days, so please forgive/correct any inaccuracies. |
|
One reason to reach for the pure functional libraries is a desire to avoid some of the many footguns Akka / Pekko has. For a long time, using Akka meant not being able to rely on the Scala type system for checking messages sent between actors, and for the people attracted to Scala due to the advanced type system, this was a deal-breaking drawback.
All in all, the FP libraries and the actor system libraries are almost direct opposite approaches to problem solving.