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The $LANG Programming Language

261 points by dang 2 days ago · 71 comments · 1 min read


This afternoon I posted some tips on how to present a new* programming language to HN: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46608577. It occurred to me that HN has a tradition of posts called "The {name} programming language" (part of the long tradition of papers and books with such titles) and it might be fun to track them down. I tried to keep only the interesting ones:

https://news.ycombinator.com/thelang

Similarly, Show HNs of programming languages are at https://news.ycombinator.com/showlang.

These are curated lists so they're frozen in time. Maybe we can figure out how to update them.

A few famous cases:

The Go Programming Language - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=934142 - Nov 2009 (219 comments)

The Rust programming language - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1498528 - July 2010 (44 comments)

The Julia Programming Language - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3606380 - Feb 2012 (203 comments)

The Swift Programming Language - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7835099 - June 2014 (926 comments)

But the obscure and esoteric ones are the most fun.

(* where 'new' might mean old, of course - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23459210)

chuckadams a day ago

For a moment I thought there was actually a new language called $LANG, which would have been wonderful.

  • trollbridge a day ago

    I was thinking how it would be odd to have a programming language called en_AU.UTF-8.

  • Lammy a day ago

    There's a language called SLang inside Goldman Sachs used for their SecuritiesDB, and that's how I read it at first glance even with the dollar sign lol https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Dubno#SecDB

    • snthpy a day ago

      That's what I thought too. The $ sign seemed quite appropriate given Goldman's line of business.

    • wahern a day ago

      See also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S-Lang (https://www.jedsoft.org/slang/index.html), a (stack-based) scripting language implementing a terminal UI toolkit. Mutt can use use S-Lang instead of ncurses.

    • dangOP a day ago

      I wonder what a program written in that language looks like.

      • rayxi271828 a day ago

        Slang? The IDE looked like Turbo C++ of old (blue, text based interface). Shortcuts are weird, so you need to remap keys to get sane defaults.

        Probably the most unique feature is that the language supports spaces in identifiers. So you'd have variables like "Option Portfolio Risk" or functions like "Calculate Estimated PnL". Visually obviously different from Python, but it gave me Pythonic vibes.

        It's also nice that it supports preconditions, so you can specify the valid range of arguments etc. It has some kind of OOP support but tbh it felt bolted on (understandably).

        But the most value adding, IMHO, is the DevEx and deep integration with SecDb. Say what you want about the DOS-like IDE and the old (20+ years old for sure, maybe 30+) language, but you can deploy your code SO easily into production, with guardrails in place.

        Out of curiosity, I implemented a toy language (thanks to Robert Nystrom's Crafting Interpreters) that supports spaces in identifiers (https://github.com/rayfdj/gaul-lang) as well. Makes for an interesting weekend coding project, and it helps me understand more the tradeoffs that Slang designers must have gone through.

        • andrekandre 13 hours ago

             fn Calculate Portfolio Risk(Initial Investment, Risk Factor) {
                let My Very Special Adjustment = 0.95
                Initial Investment * Risk Factor * My Very   Special Adjustment
            }
          
          that is so cool; this is actually something i've been looking for a long time

          and jam karet looks interesting; `if input ~= "yes"` made me smile.

          i also liked the keyword replacement for multiple languages as well, that could be super usefull for children learning programming i'd think!

          • rayxi271828 11 hours ago

            Thank you for the kind words! I had great fun implementing it. Robert Nystrom is such a hero for writing Crafting Interpreters.

    • charleszw a day ago

      See also the Slang shader language, it's a pretty recent development! https://shader-slang.org

  • Radle a day ago

    Same! My first thoughts: "Is this language pronounced Lang or Slang? Slang is actually a cool name for a new programming language..."

  • fermigier a day ago

    There was a Linux distribution (briefly) called "$DISTRO". Known today as "Ubuntu".

  • librasteve a day ago

    well Raku has the Slangify module https://raku.land/zef:lizmat/Slangify

  • hashmush a day ago

    I use that every day at $WORK!

  • null_onset a day ago

    The $LANG programming language, where the keywords are all just in-jokes that change from week to week.

  • blumenkraft 20 hours ago

    Goldman Sachs does have a language called Slang

  • cvoss a day ago

    Likewise. Thought it'd be pronounced "slang", and thought the semantics would be you define LANG=<name of a language> at the top of the file (like a hashbang) and then write in whatever language you please. $LANG is a neato language because it has all the coolest features rolled into one unified design: polymorphic lifetime borrowing, endofunctor monoid monads, (stacked) coroutines, and even quantum data types.

almusdives a day ago

Just wanted to say this post has caused a huge spike in traffic to my language's website: a dizzying ~40 visitors per day up from ~0 haha!

Animats a day ago

See "The Your Name Here Story" (1960) [1] It's a generic industrial film.

[1] https://archive.org/details/YourName1960

johnfn a day ago

This is a fun false positive :) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34675259

  • _false 20 hours ago

    Not because it's not a PL, but because:

    > This article doesn't use the name "Lisp" enough. The language with the best chance of lasting a long time is the one with the simplest syntax. That is Lisp...

  • dangOP a day ago

    Whoops! I tried to catch those but yes.

dangOP 2 days ago

Yikes, I tanked HN's performance by posting this! Probably because of loading all those old threads over and over.

I've moved the URL out of the link at the top, which seems to be helping for now.

(now I have to decide whether to go down another rabbit hole and fix that)

oecumena 17 hours ago

'The Lobster Programming Language (strlen.com)' is duplicated.

middayc 19 hours ago

What are these /thelang and /showlang?

Are these like permanent urls that we can use to filter posts?

This makes me thing about what other permanent urls/filters there are. Is there a list somewhere?

gdotdesign a day ago

Thanks for putting these lists together. When Mint reaches 1.0 I'll use the same format to present it here.

zahlman a day ago

That reminds me, I really should blog my design ideas for my spiritual successor to Python....

fsckboy a day ago

the headline made me think somebody else came up with my idea. I wanted to a create a language whose name was langlang. to understand how to parse it, that would be the equivalent as a name to C, and the equivalent to clang would be langlanglang.

I considered the shorter name lang, but lang already has a meaning and I thought then in that world langlang might confuse people as to the actual name of the language, whereas since langlanglanglang is clearly needless overkill in a name, langlang and langlanglang would provide just the right amount readability and reinforcement as to the actual name of langlang.

macintux a day ago

I feel like there’s an Advent of Code challenge lurking here.

GaryBluto 2 days ago

Very useful! Thanks for the addition.

wizzwizz4 2 days ago

So these are just static pages, not new entries for https://news.ycombinator.com/lists?

  • dangOP 2 days ago

    Alas, yes, at least for now. Seems like an LLM could be good at finding them though. A regex is probably too crude.

    • wizzwizz4 a day ago

      The old lesson from the Wizard of Oz experiment says that a regular expression probably isn't too crude, if you're willing to take the time to design it. Though you could probably get away with running a regex golf algorithm (e.g. https://nbviewer.org/url/norvig.com/ipython/xkcd1313.ipynb) over the list of matching titles, and the union of some list of non-matching-but-close titles (chosen to get good discrimination) with some list of way-off titles (to avoid overfitting). (You could treat the whole HN title database, other than the ones you've identified, as losers, but that risks hardcoding the absence of a post you accidentally missed, and would also take slightly longer – though Peter Norvig's first algorithm takes time linear in the number of losers, so it might not be too expensive. I don't know how expensive his improved versions are, given large lists of losers: https://nbviewer.org/url/norvig.com/ipython/xkcd1313-part2.i.... Better algorithms are surely available.)

  • dredmorbius a day ago

    That was going to be my suggestion as well.

big-chungus4 a day ago

where can I check out the language?

zeckalpha a day ago

See also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Programming_Languag...

jeswin a day ago

I did a Show HN for a language called Tsonic yesterday, which is a variant of TypeScript (all tsonic is valid typescript) requiring stronger typing which compiles to x64/ARM native code via .Net/NativeAOT. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46604308

It didn't appear in Show HN at all. Perhaps because another user posted it as a regular topic just a few minutes earlier, which drops off very quickly (within minutes) - but I think the issue is wider.

For a while now, I've felt that the new topics stream requires you to promote the topic outside of HN to be seen on HN - sometimes by adding a "Discuss on HN" link in the blog, or on social networks etc. The problem is quite fundamental: the "Show" link gets a small fraction of clicks. The "Show New" (two clicks away) probably gets tinier, miniscule fraction of clicks. The intersection of people who are interested in the project and those who have clicked "Show New" would be very nearly null. So upvotes will have to come from outside.

lingying a day ago

The MoonBit Programming Language - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37174619 -Aug 19, 2023 (152 comments)

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