• @[email protected]
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        1424 days ago

        Also the difference between TS and JS doesn’t make sense at first glance. 🤷‍♂️ I guess I need to read the research.

      • @[email protected]
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        123 days ago

        For Haskell to land that low on the list tells me they either couldn’t find a good Haskell programmer and/or weren’t using GHC.

      • JustEnoughDucks
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        524 days ago

        I would be interested in how things like MATLAB and octave compare to R and python. But I guess it doesn’t matter as much because the relative time of those being run in a data analysis or research context is probably relatively low compared to production code.

        • esa
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          724 days ago

          Is there a lot of computation-intensive code being written in pure Python? My impression was that the numpy/pandas/polars etc kind of stuff was powered by languages like fortran, rust and c++.

          • esa
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            324 days ago

            And it powers a lot of phones. People generally don’t like it when their phone needs to charge all the freaking time.

            • @[email protected]
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              24 days ago

              I ran Linux with KDE on my phone for a while and it for sure needed EVEN MORE charging all the time even though most of the system is C, with a sprinkle of C++ and QT.

              But that is probably due to other inefficiencies and lack of optimization (which is fine, make it work first, optimize later)

              • esa
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                424 days ago

                Yeah, and Android has had some 16 years of “optimize later”. I have some very very limited experience with writing mobile apps and while I found it to be a PITA, there is clearly a lot of thought given to how to not eat all the battery and die in the ecosystem there. I would expect that kind of work to also be done at the JVM level.

                If Windows Mobile had succeeded, C# likely would’ve been lower as well, just because there’d be more incentive to make a battery charge last longer.

                • @[email protected]
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                  224 days ago

                  C# has been very optimized since .NET Core (now .NET). Also jit compiler and everything around it.

          • @[email protected]
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            424 days ago

            Because usually they use the super fat flavor of Java. Jabba Fatt tier of lardiness Java.

            • @[email protected]
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              24 days ago

              I’m using the fattest of java (Kotlin) on the fattest of frameworks (Spring boot) and it is still decently fast on a 5 year old raspberry pi. I can hit precise 50 μs timings with it.

              Imagine doing it in fat python (as opposed to micropython) instead like all the hip kids.

          • @[email protected]
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            424 days ago

            In theory Java is very similar to C#, an IL based JIT runtime with a GC, of course. So where is the difference coming from between the two? How is it better than pascal, a complied language? These are the questions I’m wondering about.

          • @[email protected]
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            124 days ago

            That definitely raised an eyebrow for me. Admittedly I haven’t looked in a while but I thought I remembered perl being much more performant than ruby and python

          • @[email protected]
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            224 days ago

            etalon
            /ˈɛtəlɒn/
            noun Physics
            noun: etalon; plural noun: etalons

            a device consisting of two reflecting glass plates, employed for measuring small differences in the wavelength of light using the interference it produces.

            I don’t see how that word makes sense in that phrase

      • @[email protected]
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        524 days ago

        WASM would be interesting as well, because lots of stuff can be compiled to it to run on the web

        • Ben Matthews
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          24 days ago

          Indeed, here’s an example - my climate-system model web-app, written in scala running (mainly) in wasm
          (note: that was compiled with scala-js 1.17, they say latest 1.19 does wasm faster, I didn’t yet compare).
          [ Edit: note wasm variant only works with most recent browsers, maybe with experimental options set - if not try without ?wasm ]

            • Ben Matthews
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              224 days ago

              Oh, it’s designed for a big desktop screen, although it just happens to work on mobile devices too - their compute power is enough, but to understand the interactions of complex systems, we need space.

      • @[email protected]
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        724 days ago

        I guess we can take the overhead of rust considering all the advantages. Go however… can’t even.

      • @[email protected]
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        24 days ago

        For Lua I think it’s just for the interpreted version, I’ve heard that LuaJIT is amazingly fast (comparable to C++ code), and that’s what for example Löve (game engine) uses, and probably many other projects as well.

      • Caveman
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        123 days ago

        Wonder what they used for the JS state since it’s dependent on the runtime.

      • I Cast Fist
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        424 days ago

        Looking at the Energy/Time ratios (lower is better) on page 15 is also interesting, it gives an idea of how “power hungry per CPU cycle” each language might be. Python’s very high

      • @[email protected]
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        324 days ago

        Every time I get surprised by the efficiency of Lisp! I guess they mean Common Lisp there, not Clojure or any modern dialect.

        • @[email protected]
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          123 days ago

          Yeah every time I see this chart I think “unless it’s performance critical, realtime, or embedded, why would I use anything else?” It’s very flexible, a joy to use, amazing interactive shell(s). Paren navigation is awesome. The build/tooling is not the best, but it is manageable.

          That said, OCaml is nice too.

    • @[email protected]
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      724 days ago

      Does the paper take into account the energy required to compile the code, the complexity of debugging and thus the required re-compilations after making small changes? Because IMHO that should all be part of the equation.

      • @[email protected]
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        1124 days ago

        It’s a good question, but I think the amount of time spent compiling a language is going to be pretty tiny compared to the amount of time the application is running.

        Still - “energy efficiency” may be the worst metric to use when choosing a language.

          • esa
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            524 days ago

            And battery costs, including charging time, for a lot of devices. Users generally aren’t happy with devices that run out of juice all the time.

      • @[email protected]
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        624 days ago

        They compile each benchmark solution as needed, following the CLBG guidelines, but they do not measure or report the energy consumed during the compilation step.

        Time to write our own paper with regex and compiler flags.