Comment by BanazirGalbasi
18 hours ago
Because Lua's Hello World is just `print("hello, world")`, which looks a lot like Python and doesn't tell you much about actually using the language.
18 hours ago
Because Lua's Hello World is just `print("hello, world")`, which looks a lot like Python and doesn't tell you much about actually using the language.
The point is, it shouldn’t be too hard just to find an example and get a sense of the language.
Learn x in y is always my goto: https://learnxinyminutes.com/lua/
So put a slightly more informative hello world example then.
Look at the Go homepage. Or Nim. (But not Rust sadly.)
Rather than Hello World, I'd rather see something like a classic Fibonacci calculator with recursion. That way you see function definitions, variable typing, math operations (Lua doesn't have increment/decrement operators or augmented assignments), and even tail-call recursion if it's an option. Hello World is really only useful as an environment verification - do you have your machine set up so you can run the code, or are you missing something?
Look at the Go homepage. It has a variety of examples.