Elixir v1.20 released: now a gradually typed language

(elixir-lang.org)

163 points | by cloud8421 1 hour ago

6 comments

  • satvikpendem 0 minutes ago
    How does it compare to Gleam? Or rather, why use Elixir over Gleam now? I suppose Phoenix and Live View in particular are big draws to Elixir.
  • sestep 53 minutes ago
    I've seen various posts about Elixir's gradual type system pop up on HN, but haven't been following too closely. Does anyone know whether this particular gradual type system can change the asymptotics of programs vs untyped code? As far as I'm aware, most gradual type systems (e.g. Racket) can make programs run asymptotically slower, although there are some exceptions [1].

    [1] https://doi.org/10.1145/3314221.3314627

    • eben-vranken 46 minutes ago
      Elixir's gradual type system cannot change the asymptotic complexity of your programs. The design explicitly rules out mechanism that causes slowdowns in other gradual type systems (runtime casts at static/dynamic boundaries)

      Most gradual type systems insert coercions when values cross the types/untyped boundary (checking every element of a list, wrapping values in typed proxies, etc) but Elixir's team published a "strong arrows" result specifically to achieve soundness without those runtime checks. The bytecode the compiler emits is semantically identical to untyped code.

      • dnautics 45 minutes ago
        i think the design can push people into writing unnecessary matches/guards just to trigger the typechecker.

        that said, I'm a fan

  • ch4s3 37 minutes ago
    This is great, and it looks like 1.20 is compiling our large umbrella app quite a bit faster.
  • WolfeReader 11 minutes ago
    Wonderful. I know several devs who were turned off of Elixir because of bad experiences with dynamic typing. Hopefully this helps!
  • sevenzero 55 minutes ago
    Oh shit here I go (and learn Elixir for a whole year (again)) again.

    I love everything about Elixir, but Elixir constantly makes me doubt myself like no other language. My brain isnt made for functional stuff, but this makes me want to try again.

    Sucks that it's not really a beginner friendly ecosystem and usually, when having questions answered, people assume you already know a lot about the language.

    • pjm331 45 minutes ago
      https://pragprog.com/titles/lhelph/functional-web-developmen...

      don't let the title fool you - the first half of the book is just elixir

      over the past 8 years this is the book i've used to ramp back up on elixir and it works like a charm every time - i've never finished it

      for me, a mark of a good programming book in this tutorial-project style is that I have started it half a dozen times and never finished it because at some point before the end I've been equipped w/ the tools to go off and do my own thing

      • kajman 15 minutes ago
        I've heard that Phoenix has changed a lot since that book was written. How relevant are those framework specific parts still?
      • sevenzero 39 minutes ago
        Yea I've worked through Elixir in Action and appreciate all book recommendations. My issue is, tutorial style books rarely cover security related concerns.
        • felixgallo 2 minutes ago
          what do you mean by 'security related concerns'?
    • pdimitar 51 minutes ago
      I invite you to ask on ElixirForum. I have never seen a truly hostile response.

      Sometimes posts don't get traction due to ambiguity, and some smelled like "do my homework" so people ignored them.

      But every post with a genuine curiosity in it gets answered, as far as I can tell.

      • sevenzero 46 minutes ago
        Yea I've posted there twice as far as I remember. You will absolutely get help, whether you understand the answers is a whole different story.

        Elixirs community is great. Its just hard to learn because it's not yet widely adopted, there are no (non senior) roles for it and it's a lot of work understanding all the BEAM concepts. A thing just being interesting isn't enough motivation for me to learn, I need a bigger goal but with Elixir there do not seem to be any.

        My last experience with it was building something with Phoenix Liveview until I noticed how easily you can hijack the websocket and just spam random commands to your server or temper with payloads (with regular webapps ive built i never had this issue). Which made me quit that project.

        • pdimitar 43 minutes ago
          Fair. If you have this friction then it's not worth pursuing.

          One thing that really helped me pick it up was saying YOLO and rewriting one part of the business stack from Ruby on Rails to Elixir. It taught me quickly and well.

          The official guides are also great and IMO you can get through them all without a rush in two weekends. But again, if you don't want to then don't.

          You can also try asking right here in this HN thread. Maybe I or others would be willing to give you a more detailed response.

          • sevenzero 27 minutes ago
            When building I couldn't get "what if I have ghost processes", "what if I spawn too many processes", "what if this architecture is bad compared to...", "when to kill processes", "whats the correct restart strategy for this" out of my head... It's so confusing to build for the BEAM that I ultimately gave up on it.
        • ch4s3 39 minutes ago
          > whether you understand the answers is a whole different story.

          You can always ask follow up questions for clarification, people there are generally really friendly.

    • mihaelm 46 minutes ago
      Do you maybe know some Rust? I'm also not that experienced with FP languages, but Gleam felt familiar enough, due to some Rust-isms, to allow me to focus more on the concepts rather than the syntax. Granted, I spent a few afternoons with it, but if I were to pick a FP language again to wrestle my brain into submission, I'd probably go with Gleam due to familiarity.
      • sevenzero 24 minutes ago
        I gave up on Rust even quicker than on Elixir haha.

        But yea I know about Gleam and I did build some fourier transform stuff with Rust a while back. I like Gleam generally. I am just much much slower with FP and think its extremely unintuituve compared to, say, Go for example.

    • jimbokun 14 minutes ago
      Comments like this always confuse me as object oriented programs riddled with state are much harder to reason about to me.
      • sevenzero 9 minutes ago
        The confusing state riddling here happens in the background as your whole app basically is a state. The thing that really throws me off with Elixir is having to handle (possibly) hundreds of thousands of processes. Doing this correctly seemed impossible to learn for me.
        • sph 4 minutes ago
          It's not like you're dealing with hundreds of thousands of ad-hoc processes. If you're writing a web server, for example, each of these processes might simply be a client connection and they all operate the same. The fact that there are 2 or 100,000 is only a problem for the BEAM scheduler.

          Sounds like there is some foundational knowledge of Elixir that you miss and everything seems more confusing than it should be. To me writing a 'server' in Elixir is orders of magnitude easier than doing it in Python, Rust or C++.

          As someone else suggested, bring your concerns to the Elixir Forum and surely someone will clarify them for you

      • sph 9 minutes ago
        I'm working on a game engine right now (written in object oriented language, of course) and I keep itching to design a compiled functional language for games, because state spread in thousand of objects, eldritch class hierarchies, are complete hell.

        Once you taste Elixir/Erlang, there is no going back to the madness.

    • cpursley 17 minutes ago
      I find beginners respond well to this resource: https://joyofelixir.com/toc.html
    • ai_critic 48 minutes ago
      What functional stuff is throwing you off? A whole bunch of it can be written procedurally when starting out.
      • sevenzero 33 minutes ago
        With Elixir specifically it was the learning experience I had with Phoenix. I didn't understand how a Phoenix app booted, didn't know where to edit my config. Syntax like:

        ``` socket "/ws/:user_id", MyApp.UserSocket, websocket: [path: "/project/:project_id"]

        ```

        Elixir gives you too much freedom on how to write something on a syntax level which really annoyed me.

        • solid_fuel 13 minutes ago
          I love Elixir and Phoenix, but Phoenix especially uses a lot of compile-time macros and it can be a steep learning curve when you need to pull apart the skeleton framework to figure out how things are actually wired.

          I pretty frequently find myself needing to open up the source to understand what's actually going on, the docs aren't bad but it often feels like they assume a lot of existing familiarity with phoenix.

          In this example, `socket` is a compile time macro and it's being called with

              path = "/ws/:user_id"
              module = MyApp.UserSocket
              args = [
                websocket: [
                  path: "/project/:project_id"
                ]
              ]
          
          and what is does is register that data with the `phoenix_sockets` attribute inside the module you called `socket` from. At compile time that gets turned into a lookup inside your module, and presumable then the UserSocket module is invoked when a websocket request hits the specified path.

          Would you find it more clear if socket was called like this?

              socket("/ws/:user_id", MyApp.UserSocket, [websocket: [path: "/project/:project_id"]])
          
          
          Or, alternatively, would it help if the endpoint was more specifically defined like

              defmodule MyApp.Endpoint do
                use Phoenix.Endpoint, 
                  otp_app: :my_app,
                  web_sockets: [
                    socket("/ws/:user_id", MyApp.UserSocket, [websocket: [path: "/project/:project_id"]])
                  ]
              end
          • sevenzero 6 minutes ago
            I think the lack of parentheses is whats throwing me off regularly with Elixir.
        • ch4s3 25 minutes ago
          > Elixir gives you too much freedom on how to write something on a syntax level

          This is true perhaps compared to python or go, but not compared to Java, JS/TS, or some others.

          > socket "/ws/:user_id", MyApp.UserSocket, websocket: [path: "/project/:project_id"]

          Socket is a behavior, which is like a trait or interface. MyAppWeb.UserSocket implements the behavior. It's basically a convenience over having to write a bunch of repetitive WS or long poll handling every time you want a socket like thing. Its pretty well documented https://phoenix.hexdocs.pm/Phoenix.Socket.html.

    • qaq 49 minutes ago
      community is super nice I am sure you will get help.
  • 7bit 25 minutes ago
    Found elixir intriguing and so Phoenix.

    Two reasons I put it aside again are:

    You need Beam and the Elixir. I find that really weird, because I'm used to just the language like in Python, Java, C, Rust. Not something underneath it, too.

    There is no debugger. The way to debug Elixir is to print stuff to the console, like 40 years ago. No thanks.

    • victorbjorklund 19 minutes ago
      That is just wrong.

      > You need Beam and the Elixir. I find that really weird, because I'm used to just the language like in Python, Java, C, Rust. Not something underneath it, too

      The beam is a VM. You get that Java requires a VM too right? It’s called JVM for a reason. And Python requires an interpreter.

      > There is no debugger. The way to debug Elixir is to print stuff to the console, like 40 years ago.

      That is false. https://www.erlang.org/doc/apps/debugger/debugger_chapter.ht... and you have observer. And you have a lot of other debugging tools. I hear Java has a good one and maybe it’s better (I never used it) but it’s not true there exist no debuggers for the beam.

      • Spixel_ 8 minutes ago
        Almost nobody uses it though, which is too bad, especially since multi-head functions sometimes make it difficult to follow the execution path.

        I'd like to do step by step but I cannot plug the debugger to VScode from inside a docker container.

    • lionkor 23 minutes ago
      Java has the JVM the same way that Elixir has Beam/OTP/...
      • hackyhacky 20 minutes ago
        And CPython runs Python bytecode, which is basically running in a Python virtual machine.

        I am not sure what GP is objecting to.

      • 7bit 17 minutes ago
        Read again...

        Here's what you need to do for elixir:

        Download and run the Erlang installer Download and run the Elixir installer

        Here for Java: Download and run the Java SDK

        And for Python: Download and run the Python installer

        • dematz 2 minutes ago
          Is your issue something with the runtime itself, or just the difficulty of installing it?
        • WolfeReader 5 minutes ago
          Here's what you need for Java:

          Download SDKMan/Jenv

          Install the version(s) of Java you need for your projects

          Make sure your JAVA_HOME environment variable is set

          Ensure your IDEs locate the correct Java home

          Compared to all that, Elixir's two installers are trivial.

          And if you have a competent package manager, you can just tell it to get Elixir and it'll handle Erlang for free.

    • wkrp 11 minutes ago
      To be fair, there is more than just print debugging. You have access to tools like red(x)bug https://github.com/nietaki/rexbug, the Elixir-LS project has Debug Adapter Protocol support. And in my opinion, the REPL (and decent software architecture) makes it easy to investigate your code by just running the functions as needed (even if your live production system if you want).
    • hmmokidk 11 minutes ago
      I genuinely needed that laugh. Thank you