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Unofficial FAQ
If you are looking for the official FAQ then you can find it here
For beginners I suggest to implement missing parts of the standard library or some other more specialized libraries:
- locale support
- bignums
- a lean GUI library
- libraries for scientific computing
- libraries that deal with multi-media
- etc.
Versions with a trailing odd number are considered to be "in-development", these are unstable "bleeding-edge" versions of the compiler which you can get from Github. Versions with an even number are releases. E.g. 0.9.0 is a release version, 0.9.1 is an in-development version.
Most probably not. Reasons for avoiding them are:
- If proper block comments exist, they should be nestable. This means you cannot tokenize Nimrod with regular expressions anymore.
- The editor can be used to put "#" in front of every line.
- "when false" is not a bad solution. At least syntax is still checked for deactivated code.
- discard """ """" is another solution.
- Identifiers which only differ in case are bad style. If the programming language treats them the same the programmer needs to come up with different names for different things.
- Case insensitivity is widely considered to be more user friendly. This holds for file systems, configuration files, and programming languages.
- Many programming languages are case insensitive: Lisp, Basic, Pascal, Ada, Eiffel, Fortran. Since software for aircrafts and power plants has been written in Ada, it seems reasonable to assume that case insensitivity will not destroy civilisation.
- Note that most people confuse case sensitivity with case consistency (which is indeed good style). However, case consistency is easier to achieve with case insensitivity and a properly configured IDE than with case sensitivity.
You can find examples in the examples/ directory. There are also many other examples available on Rosetta Code.
- http://critical.eschertech.com/2010/04/07/danger-unsigned-types-used-here/
- http://forum.nimrod-lang.org/t/313#1631
Tabs are treated differently by different tools and editors. Because indentation is so important in Nimrod it is much simpler to outright forbid tabs in source code than to risk the mixing of tabs and spaces. Guido van Rossum of Python himself has said that if he were to design Python again he would forbid tabs.
Nimrod is certainly not unique in forbidding tabs. YAML does the same.
Intro
Getting Started
- Install
- Docs
- Curated Packages
- Editor Support
- Unofficial FAQ
- Nim for C programmers
- Nim for Python programmers
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- Nim for D programmers
- Nim for Java programmers
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Developing
- Build
- Contribute
- Creating a release
- Compiler module reference
- Consts defined by the compiler
- Debugging the compiler
- GitHub Actions/Travis CI/Circle CI/Appveyor
- GitLab CI setup
- Standard library and the JavaScript backend
Misc