Comment by quotemstr
1 day ago
That's what the "Profiles" feature is. The problem is that any nontrivial real world program in a non-GC language needs non-owning reference types to perform well, and you can't express the rules for safe use of non-owning references without augmenting the language. People have tried. You need something more sophisticated than using smart pointers for everything. In the limit, smart pointers for everything is just called "Python".
What infuriates me about the C++ safety situation is that C++ is by and large a better, more expressive language than Rust is, particularly with respect to compile time type level metaprogramming. And I am being walked hands handcuffed behind my back, alongside everyone else, into the Rust world with its comparatively anemic proc macro shit because the C++ committee can't be bothered to care about memory safety.
Because of the C++ standards committee's misfeasance, I'm going to have to live in a world where I don't get to use some of my favorite programming techniques.
> You need something more sophisticated than using smart pointers for everything. In the limit, smart pointers for everything is just called "Python".
I don't see how that follows at all. What makes Python Python (and slow!) is dynamic dispatch everywhere down to the most primitive things. Refcounted smart pointers are a very minor thing in the big picture, which is why we've seen Python implementations without them (Jython, IronPython). Performance-wise, yes, refcounting certainly isn't cheap, but you just do that and keep everything else C++-like, the overall performance profile of such a language is still much closer to C++ than to something like Python.
You can also have refcounting + something like `ref` types in modern C# (which are essentially restricted-lifetime zero-overhead pointers with inferred or very simplistic lifetimes):
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/language-ref...
It doesn't cover all the cases that a full-fledged borrow checked with explicit lifetime annotations can, but it does cover quite a few; perhaps enough to adopt the position that refcounting is "good enough" for the rest.
> Jython, IronPython
Both of which have modern, concurrent, parallel, and generational garbage collectors.
Python doesn't have lvalues in the way that C++ and Rust do. You can't refcount everything and still pass lvalues to subobjects. If lvalues to subobjects are important, you need borrow checking.
> In the limit, smart pointers for everything is just called "Python".
To be more precise, it's old Python. Recent versions of Python use a gc.
> And I am being walked hands handcuffed behind my back, alongside everyone else, into the Rust world with its comparatively anemic proc macro shit because the C++ committee can't be bothered to care about memory safety.
Out of curiosity (as someone working on static analysis), what properties would you like your compiler to check?
To be even more precise:
> Reference counting is the primary mechanism of garbage collection, however, it doesn’t work when the references have cycles between them and for handling such cases it employs the GC.
I've been thinking for a while now about using dependant typing to enforce good numerics in numerics kernels. Wouldn't it be nice if we could propagate value bounds and make catastrophic cancellation a type error?
Have you worked much with SAL and MIDL from Microsoft? Using SAL (an aesthetically hideous but conceptually beautiful macro based gradual typing system for C and C++) overlay guarantees about not only reference safety but also sign comparison restriction, maximum buffer sizes, and so on.
Dependent types in well-behaved, well-defined snippets of C++ dedicated to numeric kernels?
While I think it's a great idea, this also sounds like it would require fairly major rewrites (and possibly specialized libraries?), which suggests that it would be hard to get much buy-in.
Please do this.
But first: we need to take step-zero and introduce a type "r64": a "f64" that is not nan/inf.
Rust has its uint-thats-not-zero - why not the same for floating point numbers??
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