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ooc - A Hybrid Language Experiment (OSCON 2010)

ooc - A Hybrid Language Experiment (OSCON 2010)

I was honored to be amongst famous language designers (Ola Bini, Steve Dekorte, Walter Bright, Jonathan Shapiro, Rich Hikey, Jeremy Ashkenas, Slava Pestov, Christopher Bertels, Rob Pike, Charles Nutter, Gilad Brach) to present my own little programming language: ooc.

Amos Wenger

July 22, 2010
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  1. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Why? • Software sucks •

    It's unreliable • It's slow • It's too hard to develop • It's not modular enough • [insert rant here] « The quality of a piece of software is inversely proportional to its popularity. » — Buchheit's law
  2. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Why? • The fate of

    popular software Time Users Quality Features
  3. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Why? • Languages suck void

    (*signal(int, void (*fp)(int)))(int); signal: Func(Int, Func(Int)) -> Func(Int) ✔ ✘
  4. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Why? • Tools suck small.cpp(17)

    : error C2664: 'class std::_Tree<class std::basic_string<char,struct std::char_traits<char>,class std::allocator<char> >,struct std::pair<class std::basic_string<char,struct std::char_traits<char>,class std::allocator<char> >const ,int>,struct std::multimap<class std::basic_string<char,struct std::char_traits<char>,c std::allocator<char> >,int,struct std::less<class std::basic_string<char,struct std::char_traits<char>,class std::allocator<char> > >,class std::allocator<int> >::_Kfn std::less<class std::basic_string<char,struct std::char_traits<char>,class std::allocat > >,class std::allocator<int> > ::iterator __thiscall std::multimap<class std::basic_string<char,struct std::char_traits<char>,class std::allocator<char> >,int,s std::less<class std::basic_string<char,struct std::char_traits<char>,class std::allocat > >,class std::allocator<int> >::insert(const struct std::pair<class std::basic_string<char,struct std::char_traits<char>,class std::allocator<char> > const &)' : cannot convert parameter 1 from 'const int' to 'const struct std::pair<class std ::basic_string<char,struct std::char_traits<char>,class std::allocator<char> > const ,i Reason: cannot convert from 'const int' to 'const struct std::pair<class std::basic_string<char,struct std::char_traits<char>,class std::allocator<char> const , No constructor could take the source type, or constructor overload resolution wa ambiguous
  5. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Why? • Tools suck •

    GNU autoconf, automake, autoreconf – masochism • GNU ld – the kitchen sink of linkers • GNU make – the brainless servant • Bad workers blame the tool • What if good workers do too? • Break with tradition
  6. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Why? • School assignment in

    C – laziness. • 4 months later – ooc 0.1 • « Version 1 Sucks, But Ship It Anyway » – J. Atwood • Finding a purpose • To remove obstacles • To encourage experimentation • To minimize frustration
  7. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger What? • Classes, abstract, single

    inheritance, virtual by default • Garbage collection (Boehm, opt-out) • Covers, function overloading • Partial type inference, more type-checking • Arrays, pointers, manual memory management • Generic functions, generic classes, collections • Interfaces, operator overloading, properties • Closures, first-class functions, map/filter/reduce
  8. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger What? • I was gonna

    describe the syntax here • But we're short on schedule so I'll just sum it up: • « ooc syntax is Java without bullshit » - Anonymous • I'm sorry if you were offended. • Java offends me too.
  9. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Design principles • Build upon,

    extend, divide and conquer • Re-use what makes sense, rewrite the rest as we go • JDK – an example of how NOT to do modularity • SDK – all you need to get started, easy to swap out • Dependency management made easy • Making it easy to use libs encourages good design
  10. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Acronym fair • DRY •

    KISS • IYFF • YAGNI • RTFMRTFC • TMTOWTDI
  11. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Paradigm City • Object-oriented Window

    new("Vista"). add( Button new("Buy"). connect("clicked", || "Seriously?" println() ) ). showAll()
  12. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Paradigm City • Generic programming

    Cell: class <T> { data: T next: This<T> init: func (=data) {} } c := Cell new(42)
  13. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Paradigm City • Preemptive multi-threading

    mutex := Mutex new() Thread new(|| mutex lock() // prove Fermat's last theorem mutex unlock() ) start()
  14. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Paradigm City • Communicating Sequential

    Processes chan := make(Int) go(|| chan << question answer := ! chan ) 24h for a basic implementation using libcoroutine 80'000 concurrent coroutines = easy, more with tweaks
  15. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Paradigm City • ...is pretty

    much a nice walk with ooc • Provide the necessary building blocks • Don't enforce the « one true way » • Politics != Technology • High-level low-level language.
  16. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Generating C – the perks

    throw old VMExcuse("I wasn't ready!"); if name == "__main__": dont_hold_your_breath()
  17. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Generating C – the perks

    • GCC (Gnu Compiler Collection), TI-GCC, mingw32 • TCC (TinyCC) • ICC (Intel C++ Compiler) • Clang (LLVM) • PCC (Portable C compiler - with tweaks) • No MSVC (yet?) - they're too busy with C++0x • ...although in theory it wouldn't be that hard.
  18. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Generating C – the perks

    • Did you know that GCC -O2 did TCO? • Turn segfault into infinite loops. • Protip: use -O0 (the default) when debugging
  19. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger ooc - the platform •

    Self-hosting • Without a doubt the best way to generate C • A real module system. Partial recompilation. • The compiler as a library • C from ooc is easy • ooc from C is easy (#define OOC_FROM_C) • ooc from Python is dead easy! • ooc from X = reading JSON compiler output
  20. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger ooc – the tools •

    Good compiler errors • Valgrind, GDB • Alleyoop, Nemiver (GTK frontends for the above) • Callgrind, Kcachegrind, gprof • (Pseudo-)REPL, IRC bot • Emacs mode – flymake, tooltips with compiler errors • Lots of C bindings
  21. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger Why use ooc? • Because

    you have a llamasyntax fetish • As a better C/C++ • As a better Java with no VM • Because of the tools • Because of the community • You want to be part of the adventure
  22. OSCON 2010 http://ooc-lang.org/ Amos Wenger What's next? • Optimizations •

    Generic calls inlining – expect huge speedups • (Please, Mr. Shapiro, don't burst into flames) • Escape analysis, stack-allocation, annotations • An alternative to exceptions • Typesystem improvements • Mixins • Typestate? • Meta-programming, compile-time execution