Erlang in 100 Seconds

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  • Опубликовано: 17 мар 2024
  • Erlang is a functional programming language know for message-based concurrency model. Its BEAM virtual machine is still used by modern languages like Elixir and Gleam. Learn the basics of Erlang in this quick tutorial.
    #programming #computerscience #100secondsofcode
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    🔗 Resources
    Erlang www.erlang.org
    Elixir in 100 Seconds • Elixir in 100 Seconds
    C in 100 seconds • C in 100 Seconds
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    🔖 Topics Covered
    - What is Erlang?
    - Who created Erlang/OTP?
    - Basics of Erlang
    - Elixir vs Erlang
    - Gleam vs Erlang
    - What is the BEAM vm?
    - How to get started with Erlang
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Комментарии • 837

  • @h3w45
    @h3w45 2 месяца назад +5128

    Finally, something that isn't coming for my job

  • @TechyMage
    @TechyMage 2 месяца назад +1812

    Adding "fluent in erlang" to my resume

    • @GSBarlev
      @GSBarlev 2 месяца назад +169

      That's something I would _really hate_ to get called on. "Oh, you're fluent in erlang? Great! You're now responsible for keeping this *extremely important* but ancient codebase from exploding! Here's your company pager-hope you don't believe in nights or weekends!"

    • @yokaparthasarathy3294
      @yokaparthasarathy3294 2 месяца назад

      @@GSBarlevYou're supposed to burn the man not his soul

    • @vaisakhkm783
      @vaisakhkm783 2 месяца назад +56

      ​@@GSBarlevAnd it's made by a really excited intern 30 years ago, held on by duck tape, hope, prayers and spaghetti code base regurgitated by the 30 years of maintainers who never cleaned up their technical dept.... with a great documentation that 20 years out of date and only seen by yahoo, not google..

    • @geroutathat
      @geroutathat 2 месяца назад +20

      @@GSBarlevStop making out like its ancient not used. Its the power behind the biggest apps in the world. Facebook even tried to move to it but had trouble cross training as their coders had problems understanding stuff like tail end recursion. That ancient codebase will never explode, and it just looks like its being held together with tape from the outside, learn erlang from top to bottom and you will see the code is usually really good and solid.

    • @flashingrowth
      @flashingrowth 2 месяца назад +1

      @@geroutathat is it worth to learn it ??!

  • @mahinchowdhury3995
    @mahinchowdhury3995 2 месяца назад +1364

    Guy 1: ""So what do you wanna call this language we made?"
    Guy 2:"Err.......lang ??...."

    • @DavidJohnsson
      @DavidJohnsson 2 месяца назад +121

      I think it was more like ERicsson LANGuage.

    • @jtarchie
      @jtarchie 2 месяца назад +32

      Ericson, the telecom operator, was the main supporter for BEAM.
      Er(icson) Lang(uage).

    • @akkesm
      @akkesm 2 месяца назад +31

      Also Erlang as in the mathematician, Agner Krarup Erlang, known for his work in statistics and telecommunications.

    • @hedwig7s
      @hedwig7s 2 месяца назад +41

      Dang 3 people without a sense of humour

    • @EliasWolfy
      @EliasWolfy 2 месяца назад +9

      r/woosh ☝️🤓

  • @JohnneyleeRollins
    @JohnneyleeRollins 2 месяца назад +1283

    “Let it crash” - Joe Armstrong, economist

    • @sirrobinofloxley7156
      @sirrobinofloxley7156 2 месяца назад +5

      Trump warns US voters of a 'bloodbath' if he loses presidential election Issued on: 17/03/2024

    • @EpicNicks
      @EpicNicks 2 месяца назад +53

      ​@@sirrobinofloxley7156 Out of context misinfo

    • @monkeytimesmagazine3725
      @monkeytimesmagazine3725 2 месяца назад

      ​@@sirrobinofloxley7156his a$$ is gonna look like a bloodbath after the election

    • @AnthonyBullard
      @AnthonyBullard 2 месяца назад +8

      Joe Armstrong was one of the GOATs. RIP Joe

    • @akam9919
      @akam9919 2 месяца назад +9

      @@sirrobinofloxley7156 i fail to see the relevance of trump comments to the original one.
      (also, probably completely out of context realistically speaking.)

  • @fabilikesbutter9603
    @fabilikesbutter9603 2 месяца назад +335

    Erlang so powerful, it turned 100 seconds into 163.

    • @igorthelight
      @igorthelight 2 месяца назад +22

      That's because we awaited some tasks to finish! ;-)

    • @AaaTeeEyeBee
      @AaaTeeEyeBee 2 месяца назад +11

      It was meant to be consumed in three concurrent blocks of 100sec. 🤷‍♂

    • @vighnesh153
      @vighnesh153 2 месяца назад +7

      If Math.floor( T / 100) == 1, then it is a 100 second video.

    • @bendertherobot910
      @bendertherobot910 2 месяца назад +2

      Erlang executed tons of threads in your own mind and you didn't realise that yet...

  • @pranaygaming4437
    @pranaygaming4437 2 месяца назад +295

    A FireShip Video where u actually feel its calm and soothing in the tech world

    • @ehza
      @ehza 2 месяца назад +2

      ❤ exactly

    • @none_the_less
      @none_the_less 2 месяца назад +9

      AI is still coming for your job.

    • @aromaticsnail
      @aromaticsnail 2 месяца назад +1

      @@none_the_less not worry with my butt...it's my job I'm concerned

    • @none_the_less
      @none_the_less 2 месяца назад

      @@aromaticsnail Edited. ;)

    • @pooroldnostradamus
      @pooroldnostradamus 2 месяца назад +3

      @@none_the_lessWe're all going to die. But it's not exactly a useful allocation of our limited time to think about and lament it. It's sort of the same with imminent automation.

  • @Soul-Burn
    @Soul-Burn 2 месяца назад +421

    This is clearly a precursor to "Gleam in 100 seconds", considering it's recent 1.0 release.

  • @devgoneweird
    @devgoneweird 2 месяца назад +358

    Important thing about those processes is that they are very cheap to create and you can have lots of them at the same time.
    While it might sound unimpressive today, it did even 10-15 years ago, and this language is older than that.

    • @mohitjain5552
      @mohitjain5552 2 месяца назад +2

      What?

    • @geroutathat
      @geroutathat 2 месяца назад

      @@mohitjain5552 In the video they said you can create a process and then hang the process forever, so you might want to create a timeout. But the thing is, creating a process in erlang is cheap. You can create millions of them and leave them all hanging waiting and it wont crash your server. On a modern computer you could probably have billions of processes waiting. This can start getting chaotic even if it is acceptable code, so they use pools of processors and they queue calls to make it easier for our brains to understand exactly whats going on.... An example might be "server processes" you might start one for every single logged on person and leave it hanging until they log off, just waiting for them to do stuff. If your sever process crashes, no one else on the sytem is affected at all. If you have lets say 100 million users, and changing the name causes a crash, you can keep everyone online, have 1 million people crash, relaunch all them people instantly in a new server process, and update the running code without ever bringing the server offline.
      All of that is basically built into standard erlang. It is still impressive by todays standards. A company like facebook usually connects everyone to different computer servers, and if that server goes down, everyone on it goes down. WIth erlang 3 of the people connected to it could crash and the rest would be oblivious.
      For people who dont know erlang this can create code that looks like its being held together with tape and glue, they will get an error like "Okay 300 people cant send messages, whats going on?" and they look at the code and they cant figure it out, and indeed this is the hardest part of knowing erlang. For example an error you might find in Erlang would be an apple device is sending a packet to the server as ascii encoded, and your sever is pattern matching for binary. You and everyone else log on and its all working fine and you scratch your head.

    • @julesoscar8921
      @julesoscar8921 2 месяца назад +3

      That is green thread right?

    • @davidbriggs8109
      @davidbriggs8109 2 месяца назад

      @@julesoscar8921not really

    • @MultiMrAsd
      @MultiMrAsd 2 месяца назад +8

      @@julesoscar8921 Its green threads, but it ensures that no thread can block or crash and prevent a switch between threads. It also separates the memory of all threads for more efficient GC.

  • @kipchickensout
    @kipchickensout 2 месяца назад +565

    The syntax is crazy

    • @baubi4260
      @baubi4260 2 месяца назад +69

      Bro decided to write phrases with his code lmao

    • @cybroxde
      @cybroxde 2 месяца назад +73

      That's why Elixir exists.

    • @nguyenhanh9479
      @nguyenhanh9479 2 месяца назад +51

      @@cybroxde Elixir syntax is not exactly easy to read either.

    • @isodoubIet
      @isodoubIet 2 месяца назад +104

      I mean it's fine really, at least it doesn't define blocks with indentation

    • @kipchickensout
      @kipchickensout 2 месяца назад +23

      @@isodoubIet true, that's the worst

  • @blackjackjester
    @blackjackjester 2 месяца назад +87

    erlang did define the very popular actor model, and even more so, the lightweight processes don't just scale to thousands, they scale into the millions.
    And that doesn't even count the built in support for passing messages between machines and supporting distributed systems through nearly invisible abstractions, and providing very capable distributed caching through ETS and basic persistence through mnesia db.
    OTP is an absolute monster of a platform. Its a shame it's so esoteric to so many people.

    • @nikhilitty
      @nikhilitty 2 месяца назад +8

      Syntax does take some getting used to, but it does get easier. And fun at times.
      That being said, I wish there were more jobs using the language- or at least, I can't seem to find too many. In my limited 2YOE, this has been the language I've worked with the most, and I find it a shame that I'll have to stick to more conventional options like Java or Python.

    • @SJ-eu7em
      @SJ-eu7em 2 месяца назад

      Some years back Ericsson still used it and Spotify as well, probably couple other Swedish companies where ex E/// people went

    • @LtdJorge
      @LtdJorge 2 месяца назад

      @@SJ-eu7emThere are some products written on it with companies behind them, like RabbitMQ, EMQx, CouchDB, Couchbase, Riak, etc

    • @teknonmy7210
      @teknonmy7210 2 месяца назад

      @@nikhilitty all the jobs I've seen for Erlang require pretty high seniority, because most Erlang programmers with experience are very senior. Same thing with every obscure language I know

    • @darrennew8211
      @darrennew8211 2 месяца назад

      The whole "spawn and link" being atomic is really impressive, as is the ability to send functions over channels.

  • @oakley6889
    @oakley6889 2 месяца назад +56

    Elixir is genuinely one of my favourite languages ever, I dont get to use it often, but it beautiful, thanks erlanngg

    • @knightofrohan
      @knightofrohan Месяц назад +1

      Do you know of any great resources to learn Elixir? I find the syntax so difficult

    • @adamsilber-gniady6326
      @adamsilber-gniady6326 Месяц назад

      @@knightofrohan exercism is great

    • @ujulspins
      @ujulspins 25 дней назад

      @@knightofrohan Read books. Unlike popular languages, the bulk of knowledge here is in books, not lessons on RUclips. Lists of these books are easy to find.

  • @krateskim4169
    @krateskim4169 2 месяца назад +71

    100 seconds of gleam, waiting for it , thank you in advance

  • @TobbeEger
    @TobbeEger 2 месяца назад +8

    Having worked with Erlang during my university days, and Elixir professionally, I would argue that the BEAM based programming languages offers the best model and support for concurrency out of every major language out there.

  • @MultiMojo
    @MultiMojo 2 месяца назад +8

    Fun fact - Erlang still underpins the telecommunications systems that connect your phone to the cellular tower/base station and beyond.

  • @metropolis10
    @metropolis10 2 месяца назад +19

    Let's not forget it STILL runs the worlds telecommunications software. Plenty of people still want data, txt, or calls on their phones out there!

  • @tedb9602
    @tedb9602 2 месяца назад +45

    Was literally checking your channel for new vids about 5mins ago. Good that I retried

    • @pookiepats
      @pookiepats 2 месяца назад

      the youtube algo has failed you

  • @mritunjaymusale
    @mritunjaymusale 2 месяца назад +112

    Do a video on how android is different from linux i.e building process, distribution, code maintainence, which part of android gets upstreamed to the linux kernel, etc.
    It could be a main channel or 2nd channel video I guess.

    • @universaltoons
      @universaltoons 2 месяца назад +3

      yes pls

    • @julesoscar8921
      @julesoscar8921 2 месяца назад +1

      Basically nothing. Most constructor use their old kernel like 4.x

  • @goodness2410
    @goodness2410 2 месяца назад +1

    Fireship, I have been meaning to say this, you are a gift to the programming world. You make programming fun. Thanks for that!

  • @mr.alpaca9424
    @mr.alpaca9424 2 месяца назад +6

    Great timing, im just getting into elixir. First i knew even less about the beam and erlang now it's a bit more!

  • @brachypelma24
    @brachypelma24 2 месяца назад +5

    Now that you've done Erlang, Gleam would be a logical next topic for a 100-second video.

  • @aus10d
    @aus10d 2 месяца назад +15

    Erlang really intrigues me. And with Gleam running on top of it, I'm super Beam-curious now...

    • @blackjackjester
      @blackjackjester 2 месяца назад +1

      Learn you some erlang for great good

    • @LtdJorge
      @LtdJorge 2 месяца назад

      @@blackjackjester Ferd is the boss. I also recommend his talk The Zen of Erlang. I've watched it like 7 times.

    • @RyanIsHoping
      @RyanIsHoping 2 месяца назад

      Gleam is awesome!!

  • @Mertly
    @Mertly 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for making this. I’ve been learning erlang in university, and I love its elegance.
    It isn’t meant to be a jack of all trades like some more popular languages, but no language can beat its parallelism at scale.

  • @ErlWithCheese
    @ErlWithCheese 2 месяца назад +33

    1:11 my name is erl. love it.

    • @GSBarlev
      @GSBarlev 2 месяца назад +2

      I wasn't aware that anyone besides me remembered that show.

    • @MarinoFrana
      @MarinoFrana 2 месяца назад

      My wife and me remember, so that makes four of us?

  • @Nooobbbyyy
    @Nooobbbyyy 2 месяца назад +3

    would love to see miranda or meta language, these are pretty basic but are taught in school at most places to get into function programming. banger video btw as always :)

  • @4RILDIGITAL
    @4RILDIGITAL 2 месяца назад

    Excellent explanation of Erlang, concise and very informative. Found the parts about process isolation and message passing particularly helpful.

  • @JoaoXii
    @JoaoXii 2 месяца назад

    This was dandy sir. I'm glad you're opening this topic. I'm a big fan of your content, for its accuracy, concise, motivation starter and also its humour.
    This could be an opening for actor systems, I used Akka a good while ago, some others may have won the 'race' Microsoft had a good one as well, i think it was for C#

  • @sososo3906
    @sososo3906 2 месяца назад +5

    1:17 I love how you made the period red.

  • @smikkelbeer7890
    @smikkelbeer7890 2 месяца назад +7

    Right now, I am literally reviewing my university lectures' powerpoint about Erlang and just now thought "hmm maybe fireship has a video on this" and then I see he uploaded this 2 hours ago... There's no way this guy isn't spying on me.

  • @hickscorp
    @hickscorp 2 месяца назад +4

    Woa. I would have never imagined that you'd make a video about the BEAM. You might want to have a look at how BEAM nodes can natively pass messages through process global registries. And hot code reload across nodes!
    I've used the BEAM professionally for a while now, but much more since Elixir reached 1.2 - that was a long time ago...

  • @elhaambasheerch7058
    @elhaambasheerch7058 2 месяца назад +4

    Would love 100 seconds on these:
    - Turso
    - Zustand
    - tailwind v4
    - gleam

  • @dstick14
    @dstick14 2 месяца назад +59

    The syntax seems like what a non programmer would imagine code looks like

    • @geroutathat
      @geroutathat 2 месяца назад +11

      Thats the main reason more people dont use it. I thought it was crazy at first but I really admire it after spending proepr time writing code in it.

    • @insideTheMirror_
      @insideTheMirror_ 2 месяца назад

      Just my thought 🤣

    • @cycrothelargeplanet
      @cycrothelargeplanet 2 месяца назад

      Fr

    • @carlerikkopseng7172
      @carlerikkopseng7172 2 месяца назад +3

      Found the one who never tried anything outside the C family of languages 😸

    • @dstick14
      @dstick14 2 месяца назад +1

      @@carlerikkopseng7172 well they certainly haven't made it easy to like

  • @0e0
    @0e0 2 месяца назад +7

    Would love to see a vid about Gleam

  • @alexeycherkashin6251
    @alexeycherkashin6251 2 месяца назад +9

    So cool we have an access to all Erlang sweet parts without necessarity to learn the hard syntax and can utilize Elixir for the purpose

  • @rifaldhiaw
    @rifaldhiaw 2 месяца назад +22

    we need gleam for the next video!

  • @feelwang
    @feelwang 2 месяца назад

    Pattern matching variable is so elegant and logical that I immensely ❤️

  • @carpye2774
    @carpye2774 2 месяца назад +11

    I was wondering what people are referring to when talking about Gleam. Thanks!

  • @bpo217
    @bpo217 2 месяца назад +11

    I vote for gleam next, seems fitting 😊

  • @gtgunar
    @gtgunar 2 месяца назад +2

    Awesome! Not some stackmonkey stuff, but programming language introduction. What Originally started watching the series for. Please do an APL video! THX

  • @alexnoman1498
    @alexnoman1498 2 месяца назад +6

    Ah, the prepwork for the Gleam episode tomorrow? :p

  • @ImKauky
    @ImKauky 2 месяца назад

    I REALLY preferred your pacing in this video. It was just a touch slower and made it SO much easier to follow than some of your others

  • @raphaelmendesdasilva3858
    @raphaelmendesdasilva3858 2 месяца назад +13

    Fireship, make some videos about networking technologies.
    IPv6, HTTP3, anything.
    I think they would fit well your video format.

    • @ardonjr
      @ardonjr 2 месяца назад

      agree!

  • @infty5829
    @infty5829 Месяц назад

    Great video as always. I think a "100 seconds of UML" would be a great future idea.

  • @lpil
    @lpil 2 месяца назад +14

    Gleam mentioned!!!!

    • @0e0
      @0e0 2 месяца назад +2

      LETS GO!!!

    • @lpil
      @lpil 2 месяца назад

      @@0e0Hack yeah!!!!!

  • @user-si8ez4xd2f
    @user-si8ez4xd2f 2 месяца назад +51

    I'm in love with Gleam

    • @davidjustice8087
      @davidjustice8087 2 месяца назад +5

      Definitely interested in the language. Syntax is very nice and love the toolset kind of like go.

    • @chris-pee
      @chris-pee 2 месяца назад

      Unless you really need BEAM, you could just as well use OCaml/ReasonML/Rescript or F#.

    • @chudchadanstud
      @chudchadanstud 2 месяца назад +1

      no thanks. Variables are immutable and it doesn't throw an error when you try to reasign them.
      It's just another Lang that's gone too deep into Functional programming. It would have been perfect if it was willing to give up some of the fp philosophy for practicality. Otherwise we just have Haskell that looks like Rust running on Beam.

    • @LtdJorge
      @LtdJorge 2 месяца назад +2

      @@chudchadanstudErlang is immutable too

    • @sarun37823
      @sarun37823 2 месяца назад

      Did you say Grime? - Señor Cleanfist

  • @dilipisharayt
    @dilipisharayt 2 месяца назад +1

    The moment I've been waiting for!

  • @rofgar
    @rofgar 2 месяца назад +1

    One other crazy amazing thing is how the deployment works on a live system and calls can be concurrently executed. Previous change do all their execution with old version of code while newly deployed code is already being used for new calls.

  • @muhdiversity7409
    @muhdiversity7409 2 месяца назад +6

    Learn you some Erlang for great good.

    • @elixirfun
      @elixirfun 2 месяца назад

      Better still, learn Elixir

  • @MohammedAhmed-mr5px
    @MohammedAhmed-mr5px 2 месяца назад

    Bro, the music that you use for these videos sounds like the GTA V online heist missions.
    Great video as always

  • @sjoerd8706
    @sjoerd8706 2 месяца назад +2

    Erlang and Elixir are amazing ❤

  • @spiritrider963
    @spiritrider963 2 месяца назад +1

    I have a cool Eralng pocket knife. It was swag from an Erlang course I went on. I never completed it because I came down with pneumonia on the last day. But they were nice enough to give it to me. Probably written a five lines of Erlang in anger in my career.

  • @EdKolis
    @EdKolis 2 месяца назад

    I remember writing a plugin for Wings 3D, an open source 3D modeling app written in Erlang. One thing that always tripped me up is that the language is purely functional, so all variables are immutable; they can't actually vary!

  •  2 месяца назад

    What a “coincidence” I was writing something about Elixir and then this notification arrived 🤩😄 My favorite language!

  • @Diego-ix8ge
    @Diego-ix8ge 2 месяца назад

    The Alan Watts meme was brilliant.. as always, your memes are always on point

  • @GK-we4co
    @GK-we4co 2 месяца назад +1

    It looks surprisingly elegant when you put it this way...

    • @darrennew8211
      @darrennew8211 2 месяца назад

      The concepts are pretty elegant. The actual details are rather difficult to deal with. No strings, no records, single-assignment without being functional, no explicit time when code gets updated, the weirdness around authentication, and last I looked the documentation was extremely poor if you weren't already immersed in the environment. However, the seamless concurrency, the ability to upgrade running code (including sending functions in messages), the whole "spawn and link" paradigm, all very neat.

  • @NotGarbageLoops
    @NotGarbageLoops 2 месяца назад

    Just I start studying it. Seems very useful for low-latency distributed message-passing apps.

  • @Dominik-K
    @Dominik-K 2 месяца назад

    I really love the learnesomeerlangforgreat good book and the whole actor methodology. It's a great paradigm and one day I want to make a programming platform in similar fashion too

  • @sujezz
    @sujezz 2 месяца назад +2

    Give us something about gleam and how in practice it is useful vs. some other languages. Like what's the point of gleam when we can do c/c++/rust/go or even js.

  • @krazeemonkee
    @krazeemonkee 2 месяца назад +1

    ⭐️ gleam mentioned!

  • @steveoc64
    @steveoc64 2 месяца назад

    Re slow performance - later releases of the BEAM runtime now do jit compilation to machine code. Makes hot paths a bit quicker.
    For performance critical bits - you can call out to C abi shared libs.
    You can also write functions and resources in Zig, that use the beam engine for allocation and gc.
    Zig is one of the few languages that will play nice with this, because the whole zig stdlib takes an allocator argument where needed. You just pass it the beam’s allocator. Nice.

  • @williamflores7323
    @williamflores7323 2 месяца назад

    First Fireship video in months that doesn't make me regret my life choices 😭

  • @andiputraw140
    @andiputraw140 2 месяца назад +7

    BEAM is one of the coolest technology as i ever discovered. i should learn its internal sometime in the future along with v8

  • @dankelly
    @dankelly 2 месяца назад

    OMG! "Create a file ending in dot earl" with a pic of Earl from My Name Is Earl... Love it!!

  • @LeviElekes
    @LeviElekes 2 месяца назад

    Thx 🙏🙏

  • @ellielikesmath
    @ellielikesmath 2 месяца назад

    thanks, i would like to see a video on the nim programming language

  • @lucasgasparino6141
    @lucasgasparino6141 2 месяца назад

    A video on MPI would be a nice follow-up to this🎉

  • @shaunkruger
    @shaunkruger 2 месяца назад

    I really enjoyed my time in erlang around 2009-2011.

  • @bramvdnheuvel
    @bramvdnheuvel 2 месяца назад +2

    Please do Elm in 100 seconds next!

  • @pjcamp-eq1mj
    @pjcamp-eq1mj 2 месяца назад +1

    I missed these kinds of videos

  • @computersciencebyd-m-3323
    @computersciencebyd-m-3323 2 месяца назад

    Could you make a video on Prolog next? Thank you for your awesome channel.

  • @ClariNerd
    @ClariNerd 2 месяца назад

    I was waiting for this one

  • @ramgopal2520
    @ramgopal2520 2 месяца назад +1

    Erlang is one of the major inspiration for Go.

  • @user-ee5ge1jo9h
    @user-ee5ge1jo9h 2 месяца назад

    nice contant, keep it up, I like golang!

  • @apfelingo
    @apfelingo 2 месяца назад

    After teasing Prolog, you have to show it to us next!

  • @user-qr4jf4tv2x
    @user-qr4jf4tv2x 2 месяца назад +12

    oooh bingo let me just put it on my resume

    • @davidneal1127
      @davidneal1127 2 месяца назад +2

      Never not do resume-driven development. RDD FTW

  • @user-xi4zn4ly3o
    @user-xi4zn4ly3o 2 месяца назад

    Good evening sir thank you for sharing this video tutorial and learning today 2:15

  • @BrunoJuliao7
    @BrunoJuliao7 2 месяца назад +6

    Wow... I want to see more Erlang! 😇 Maybe a comparison video between Erlang, GLEAM, and Elixir?

  • @husseinkizz
    @husseinkizz 2 месяца назад

    finally, ship you some erlang!!!

  • @tzvischamovic372
    @tzvischamovic372 2 месяца назад

    I do react and typescript like the rest of the world, so anything related, thank you!!

  • @DineshPatel-fp6wl
    @DineshPatel-fp6wl 2 месяца назад

    Reminds me of OCCAM when I use to program transputers

  • @bendertherobot910
    @bendertherobot910 2 месяца назад

    Now, I know Erlang. Thanks!

  • @WayOfTheCode
    @WayOfTheCode 2 месяца назад +4

    Gleam mentioned lets go

  • @vaakdemandante8772
    @vaakdemandante8772 2 месяца назад +1

    Designed in 1986 yet still looks modern in 2024 - damn good design.

  • @acykablyatley
    @acykablyatley 2 месяца назад +1

    another cool part of erlang is its strict use of immutable data structures, and how it uses this to implement its garbage collector

  • @floppa9415
    @floppa9415 2 месяца назад +1

    definitely one of the languages of all time.

  • @_MrCode
    @_MrCode 2 месяца назад +37

    Scala in 100 seconds

    • @vishaldongre9557
      @vishaldongre9557 2 месяца назад +1

      Scala in 100 seconds

    • @sexyolga479
      @sexyolga479 2 месяца назад +2

      @@vishaldongre9557 Scala in 100 seconds

    • @apr0l
      @apr0l 2 месяца назад +1

      @@sexyolga479 Scala in 100 seconds

    • @artieschmidt3039
      @artieschmidt3039 2 месяца назад +1

      @@sexyolga479 Scala in 100 second

    • @__zotahina__
      @__zotahina__ 2 месяца назад +1

      Scala in 1 minute and 40 seconds

  • @mohanaggarwal4058
    @mohanaggarwal4058 2 месяца назад +2

    Mint, Imba, ReScript, ReasonML, Crystal in 100 seconds

  • @futuremoe
    @futuremoe 2 месяца назад +12

    Do you make your videos by deleting lines of code in a screen recording and then play the footage backwards?

    • @YuriG03042
      @YuriG03042 2 месяца назад +1

      yes, think he shows that on the interview to Honeypot

    • @jkibble98
      @jkibble98 2 месяца назад +4

      I'm pretty sure he just writes all the code out then records a ctrl-z. Or at least that's how I would have done it. Easier to fix mistakes and typos that way

  • @alishchess
    @alishchess 2 месяца назад

    receiver and after kinda reminds me of Go's channels and select, and reading from the go channel also works, probably Go's creators grubbed it from erling and made it a bit cleaner

  • @yearswriter
    @yearswriter 2 месяца назад

    This is even more fire than the CUDA one, POG

  • @LearnCodingWithArshad
    @LearnCodingWithArshad 2 месяца назад

    I'm just thinking how much you get to learn from all the research behind explaining all these topics. Great video as always. Take love man.

  • @0xruffbuff
    @0xruffbuff 2 месяца назад

    Thx, I never start to learn this language 😄

  • @mykalesalad
    @mykalesalad 2 месяца назад

    Never heard of her until now, very cool

  • @wowGusarich
    @wowGusarich 2 месяца назад

    We’re making it outta concurrency century with this one 🎉

  • @xE92vD
    @xE92vD 2 месяца назад +4

    "Erlang mentioned, let's go"

  • @krtirtho
    @krtirtho 2 месяца назад +3

    Crazy how this complex multiprocess solution was later replaced by a much better and simple async solution.
    Always grateful for that

    • @carlerikkopseng7172
      @carlerikkopseng7172 2 месяца назад

      What are you talking about 😂 Throwing in async doesn't make an ounce of difference

  • @KANG_THE_KONKARA
    @KANG_THE_KONKARA 2 месяца назад +1

    shikamoo mama is swahili for hello mom watching from Kenya love you content fireship

  • @bodashatta8429
    @bodashatta8429 2 месяца назад

    wow a video about a topic that is not gonna haunt my future

  • @genericjam9866
    @genericjam9866 16 дней назад

    The video concludes with the receive blocks the process which sounds like a fatal flaw until you understand that the BEAM knows to suspend processes that are waiting at a receive block. This is the secret sauce that means the BEAM is almost never blocking. When it receives a message it is 'woken up' to deal with the incoming message. While dormant it only occupies memory so the BEAM can have millions of dormant processes as each one has a very minimal memory footprint (by default - it can grow as needed).

  • @cesarizcano
    @cesarizcano 2 месяца назад +1

    Could you please make a video about tcl/tk?

  • @patrickkabuga4945
    @patrickkabuga4945 2 месяца назад

    "Shikamoo mama" Love from Kenya👌