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by burntsushi
4291 days ago
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> But I know that fast compilers and runtimes that implement generics exist, so I don't find the whole discussion believable. Are you arguing that an implementation of generics in a programming language is free? (Whether it be performance or implementation complexity.) Because if not, then you admit there are trade offs. If there are trade offs, then it is conceivable that some circumstances (including programmer tastes) may lead to a valuation that is different from yours. "Performance" of the compiler is a critical goal of the Go project. Could you point out for me an industrial strength compiler that supports a type system of your liking that can match the compilation speed of the Go compiler? (I can't think of one.) Because if not, then I'll have to invoke this: talk is cheap, show me the code. |
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I am.
Performance: if you replace all generics with interface{}, you get performance that is at better or equal to current Go code.
Implementation complexity: You could add some constraints to generics, for example only interface types can be used as generic parameters, and all uses of variables/methods/functions with generic types need to have generic parameters given. In that case, there's no complexity for code that doesn't use generics. Also, generics could actually be implemented as a preprocessor that would simply insert appropriate casts from/to interface{} at calls to generic methods. Since all variables/functions in Go are declared and have known types, you could of course go further and eliminate most generic parameter annotations.