I was talking to my manager the other day, discussing the languages we are using at $dayjob. He kind of offhandedly said that he thinks TypeScript is a temporary fad and soon everything will go back to using JavaScript. He doesn’t like that it’s made by Microsoft either.

I’m not a frontend developer so I don’t really know, but my general impression is that everything is moving more and more towards TypeScript, not away from it. But maybe I’m wrong?

Does anyone who actually works with TypeScript have any impression about this?

  • @cbarrick@lemmy.world
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    113 months ago

    Dynamic typing is not a fad.

    Python is older than Java, older than me. It is still going strong.

    • Dark ArcA
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      3 months ago

      Python also has a statically typed option these days.

      Edit: Previously said “strongly” instead of “statically”

        • Dark ArcA
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          13 months ago

          I should have said statically typed, fixed.

          • @FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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            23 months ago

            Ah, gotcha, thanks! I’d have loved a strongly-typed option.

            The static typing system is slowly getting there, but many useful Python patterns can’t be expressed yet. You can, for example, write a function that appends an item to a generic tuple - but you can’t concatenate two tuples. I really hope they keep expanding on the system!

              • @FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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                13 months ago

                No:

                $ python 
                Python 3.10.13 (main, Jan 28 2024, 03:02:00) [GCC 13.2.1 20230918 (Red Hat 13.2.1-3)] on linux
                Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
                >>> def handle_foo(value: list[int]) -> bool:
                ...     return 42
                ... 
                >>> print(handle_foo(False))
                42
                
                • Sylveon
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                  23 months ago

                  I haven’t used Python since around the time when type hints first became a thing so I might be completely wrong here, but isn’t this because Python just generally ignores type hints? If you ran a static type checker like mypy over this it would complain right?

                  Also, if you actually did anything with the list that you couldn’t do with a bool (e.g. len(value)), it would throw an error too because Python is actually pretty strict about types, just only at runtime. That’s why it’s usually considered to be strongly typed, although people don’t seem to agree what exactly that’s supposed to mean.

    • @hascat@programming.dev
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      63 months ago

      This just blew my mind. I had always assumed Java was older. I started writing hobby projects in Java in the 90s. I don’t think I heard about Python until the early 2000s.

    • @kameecoding@lemmy.world
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      -133 months ago

      “Strong”… how many actual projects run on python?

      Half of the internet ( backend) runs on java, banking, your government systems, etc.

      It’s not a fad, it’s just unusable for anything other than research project and small time scripting, which to be fair, it’s what it’s designed for.

      • @cbarrick@lemmy.world
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        123 months ago

        You have no idea. Python (and Ruby) are used widely in the industry. Large parts of YouTube are written in Python, and large parts of GitHub are written in Ruby. And every major tech company is using Python in their offline data pipelines.

        I know of systems critical to the modern web that are written in Python.

        • @kameecoding@lemmy.world
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          -153 months ago

          With how shit youtube is I am not sure you made a great case for python mate.

          And every major tech company is using Python in their offline data pipelines

          Thats a meaningless statement, ETL tools can execute python as part of a multi step process and then yeah they use python in their data pipeline, but the ETL tool that orchestrates it is which is the actual value add software is not written in Python it’s written in Java, I know this for a fact…