Vlang

vlang
https://project-awesome.org/vlang/awesome-v https://vlang.io/compare comparison between vlang, go, rust and nim http://vlang.io/ and https://modules.vlang.io/ https://github.com/vlang/vorum https://github.com/vlang/v/tree/master/examples/tetris https://github.com/vlang/v/blob/master/doc/docs.md  https://github.com/vlang/awesome-v https://github.com/vlang/doom

shell
https://levelup.gitconnected.com/vlang-for-automation-scripting-5d977ee97de

ml
https://github.com/holder66/hamnn hamming functions machine learning on datasets, replaces matlab etc.

memory management
http://aardappel.github.io/lobster/memory_management.html

compile times
https://www.reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/nnza5e/what_are_the_advantages_and_disadvantages_of_vlang/ I’m not satisfied with “compile times are ok as long as you do x y and z correctly”. Ive been working on massive elixir/Erlang projects the last 5 years and its really annoying to stop building features every few weeks to tune compile times. And with diminishing returns. Theres only so much you can do north of 200k lines. Youre going to be waiting 20s-60s after literary every change you make. Swift/rust are even worse than elixir at those sizes. Its hard to build a self sustaining company with a project that isn’t growing and adding features like that. So thats why i like vlang and go, you can keep delivering customer value, as a monolith, for years without slowing down your development feedback loop

links
Posix https://github.com/ldedev/Json2V/blob/main/README.md json to vlang structs https://pastebin.com/Em6Hy2ed install vlang from source https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1839213434 vlang book https://github.com/peregrine-lang/Peregrine/tree/rewrite written in vlang https://odin-lang.org/docs/faq/#is-odin-an-objective-oriented-language Oop, Nim lang rust is Haskell