Comment by jaen
8 hours ago
Could you actually explain/exemplify any of the gotchas and what's been made better (or is this just handwaving)?
8 hours ago
Could you actually explain/exemplify any of the gotchas and what's been made better (or is this just handwaving)?
Part of the reason Java hasn't reified generics is because C# did and it was a real big headache that also limited non-C# languages on the C# runtime (CLI?). Everything had to be recompiled to work with newer C# runtimes. While it's pretty easy to run a bunch of language on the JVM (Javascript, python, ruby, clojure) doing the same for C# is somewhat a nightmare, particularly for non-type aware languages.
For example, Imagine you have an api like `void do(List<Foo> foos)`. In the erasure environment of the JVM that looks like `void do(List foos)`. From python it's pretty easy to call with a `foos = [Foo()]`. But not so much if your python implementation needs to figure out how and if it can coarse it's `List` type into a `List<Foo>` type.
I don’t think that’s the case. You can absolutely implement a type-erased language on top of the CLR. Your language will just have the same constraints of a type-erased language like Java.
Having reified generics in the CLR just lets you store more type information. There isn’t much of a trade off for CLR end-users.
Compare this to the constraints and workarounds that Kotlin and Scala have due to type-erasure on the JVM.
> Compare this to the constraints and workarounds that Kotlin and Scala have due to type-erasure on the JVM.
The creator of Scala disagrees: https://youtu.be/Xn_YpUtXWT4?t=850
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You CAN do it, but it's much more difficult.
And as far as I'm aware, both kotlin and Scala don't really suffer due to type erasure.
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The gotcha is the potential boxing of structs onto the heap, but that can be avoided using `ref struct`s.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48599273
Why would you presume the parent is "just handwaving"? It's odd how people in the .NET community struggle to earnestly engage in conversation with Java folk. The reverse isn't true.