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Cobra is the best language I have ever known but why inactiv
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Cobra is the best language I have ever known but why inactiv
Cobra is the best language I have ever known but why inactive now? I am so sad its community has not grown so large and it development has been inactive. Something must be done to save it. This is the language I have been looking for!
- nexialist
- Posts: 2
Re: Cobra is the best language I have ever known but why ina
I think the most essential problem is that people on .NET won't typically stick with a non-Microsoft language and people who are not already on .NET will not typically use it. So many times I've been told that "Cobra looks great; too bad it's on .NET"
I'm seriously looking into rebooting Cobra as a native language. But it will be months before I have something to report (think "this fall"). In the mean time, the current Cobra for .NET cannot go away because it is open source. You are free to always use it.
Thank you for your interest.
I'm seriously looking into rebooting Cobra as a native language. But it will be months before I have something to report (think "this fall"). In the mean time, the current Cobra for .NET cannot go away because it is open source. You are free to always use it.
Thank you for your interest.
- Charles
- Posts: 2515
- Location: Los Angeles, CA
Re: Cobra is the best language I have ever known but why ina
Hi Charles,
I am a bit of a language nerd and just found out about Cobra. I have to say the combination of super readable python syntax combined with static types and Eiffel like contracts and built-in unit tests is fantastic. I have to repeat myself here: fantastic!!!
As a consequence I am very sad to see, that the project did not pick up. I am pretty sure you had your own thoughts, what can be done about it, but for what it is worth here are mine.
When designing Cobra you cleverly learned from the best languages around and you created a perfect blend of features. Now the language needs to repeat the same and see why these features are a success (over and above their core features):
1. Large Eco System (Java, .Net, Python)
2. Basis for high efficient web framework (Ruby on Rails, Django for Python) or basis for mobile development (Java, Kotlin, Swift)
3. Good IDE support (Java, .Net, Kotlin)
4. Unique value proposition (ie concurrency in Erlang)
5. Large community
Actually Cobra is not far off here:
1. Being based on .Net you have the Eco System of libraries etc.
2. Potentially being compatible to Xamarin you could be the basis for cross platform mobile development
3. You seem to have syntax coloring in several editors/IDE, but miss code completion (essential) and refactoring support (not essential)
4. You shine here
5. Big issue and hard to fix
Now my recommendation would be to:
1. Eco System: Stay on .Net at all costs (as it gives you the Eco System), only alternative would be too move to Java VM, but in the end you only would be where you are already today. Going native means abandoning your eco system.
2. Mobile Dev: Make sure you are 100% Xamarin compatible and add documentation and howto use Cobra with Xamarin. There is a forum entry here with someone asking about Xamarin and the answer is "most likely should work". That is not good enough.
3. IDE Support: Focus on one IDE (Monodevelop or VisualStudio) and get code completion working
4. Features: If you ask me, you are good here. The only thing missing for me are some performance benchmarks, compared to loose statements "is based on .Net, so should be fast".
5. Community: Go "git hub" for the source, use "Stack overflow" as support forum, update the web site, make a release (even a minor service release) etc
I run a small software company, but we do not have the compiler/language skill set to really contribute to the development efforts, but if I would have the impression that Cobra is alive and compatible to Xamarin, then I would adopt it for our next mobile up any time.
Regards
Markus
I am a bit of a language nerd and just found out about Cobra. I have to say the combination of super readable python syntax combined with static types and Eiffel like contracts and built-in unit tests is fantastic. I have to repeat myself here: fantastic!!!
As a consequence I am very sad to see, that the project did not pick up. I am pretty sure you had your own thoughts, what can be done about it, but for what it is worth here are mine.
When designing Cobra you cleverly learned from the best languages around and you created a perfect blend of features. Now the language needs to repeat the same and see why these features are a success (over and above their core features):
1. Large Eco System (Java, .Net, Python)
2. Basis for high efficient web framework (Ruby on Rails, Django for Python) or basis for mobile development (Java, Kotlin, Swift)
3. Good IDE support (Java, .Net, Kotlin)
4. Unique value proposition (ie concurrency in Erlang)
5. Large community
Actually Cobra is not far off here:
1. Being based on .Net you have the Eco System of libraries etc.
2. Potentially being compatible to Xamarin you could be the basis for cross platform mobile development
3. You seem to have syntax coloring in several editors/IDE, but miss code completion (essential) and refactoring support (not essential)
4. You shine here
5. Big issue and hard to fix
Now my recommendation would be to:
1. Eco System: Stay on .Net at all costs (as it gives you the Eco System), only alternative would be too move to Java VM, but in the end you only would be where you are already today. Going native means abandoning your eco system.
2. Mobile Dev: Make sure you are 100% Xamarin compatible and add documentation and howto use Cobra with Xamarin. There is a forum entry here with someone asking about Xamarin and the answer is "most likely should work". That is not good enough.
3. IDE Support: Focus on one IDE (Monodevelop or VisualStudio) and get code completion working
4. Features: If you ask me, you are good here. The only thing missing for me are some performance benchmarks, compared to loose statements "is based on .Net, so should be fast".
5. Community: Go "git hub" for the source, use "Stack overflow" as support forum, update the web site, make a release (even a minor service release) etc
I run a small software company, but we do not have the compiler/language skill set to really contribute to the development efforts, but if I would have the impression that Cobra is alive and compatible to Xamarin, then I would adopt it for our next mobile up any time.
Regards
Markus
- MarkusSchmitz
- Posts: 2
Re: Cobra is the best language I have ever known but why ina
Had a quick look at the Xamarin topic for Cobra.
While C# and F# are obviously the primary language for Xamarin, it should be possible to write Xamarin Forms applications in Cobra with the limitation, that the UI can not be defined in XML, but needs to be defined in code.
Assuming Intellisense and some decent examples, that should easily be possible.
Maybe worthwhile exploring ...
While C# and F# are obviously the primary language for Xamarin, it should be possible to write Xamarin Forms applications in Cobra with the limitation, that the UI can not be defined in XML, but needs to be defined in code.
Assuming Intellisense and some decent examples, that should easily be possible.
Maybe worthwhile exploring ...
- MarkusSchmitz
- Posts: 2
Re: Cobra is the best language I have ever known but why ina
Thanks Markus.
The native approach has more ecosystem than you might imagine. First, numerous libraries support SWIG (http://www.swig.org/), so if a language supports that then you immediately have GUIs, gaming libs and more. Also, it should be possible to build a run-time Python<-->Cobra bridge which would then give you access to the entire Python ecosystem.
But aside from our musings, I find it difficult to go back to dedicating nights and weekends to Cobra with a very real possibility that it doesn't take off (I already did that). I would love to work on it as my day job, though.
The native approach has more ecosystem than you might imagine. First, numerous libraries support SWIG (http://www.swig.org/), so if a language supports that then you immediately have GUIs, gaming libs and more. Also, it should be possible to build a run-time Python<-->Cobra bridge which would then give you access to the entire Python ecosystem.
But aside from our musings, I find it difficult to go back to dedicating nights and weekends to Cobra with a very real possibility that it doesn't take off (I already did that). I would love to work on it as my day job, though.
- Charles
- Posts: 2515
- Location: Los Angeles, CA
Re: Cobra is the best language I have ever known but why ina
Why not making cobra more like Peachpie https://www.peachpie.io (PHP for .NET)?
The people behind it is making business because they came with the idea of porting PHP to .NET for better performance. Initially they created Phalanger, and years later, with their experience, they re-did it from scratch using the Roslyn .NET Compiler Platform.
They can make Wordpress run on .NET using their PHP compiler and it fascinates everybody. Why not making Cobra compile python "popular" apps to .NET Framework/Core? although maybe this is already possible with IronPython. Does anyone knows the current status of IP 3.0?
Targeting the JVM? I don't think that's a good idea. There are so many languages already, just look at this infographic: https://jaxenter.com/pirates-of-the-jvm-the-infographic-132524.html . Nope, definitely not a good idea.
Cobra Native? kind of Scala Native and Kotlin Native?
Why don't you join the @RemObjects company and sell Cobra to them so they can add Cobra as their 5th language to their Elements suite (Oxygene, C#, Swift and Java), they could easily make it target .NET, Java/Android, or Cocoa frameworks/ecosystems. http://www.elementscompiler.com/elements/default.aspx
regards,
carlosqt
The people behind it is making business because they came with the idea of porting PHP to .NET for better performance. Initially they created Phalanger, and years later, with their experience, they re-did it from scratch using the Roslyn .NET Compiler Platform.
They can make Wordpress run on .NET using their PHP compiler and it fascinates everybody. Why not making Cobra compile python "popular" apps to .NET Framework/Core? although maybe this is already possible with IronPython. Does anyone knows the current status of IP 3.0?
Targeting the JVM? I don't think that's a good idea. There are so many languages already, just look at this infographic: https://jaxenter.com/pirates-of-the-jvm-the-infographic-132524.html . Nope, definitely not a good idea.
Cobra Native? kind of Scala Native and Kotlin Native?
Why don't you join the @RemObjects company and sell Cobra to them so they can add Cobra as their 5th language to their Elements suite (Oxygene, C#, Swift and Java), they could easily make it target .NET, Java/Android, or Cocoa frameworks/ecosystems. http://www.elementscompiler.com/elements/default.aspx
regards,
carlosqt
- carlosqt
- Posts: 17
- Location: Belgium
Re: Cobra is the best language I have ever known but why ina
The Lua updates are very small and far between http://www.lua.org/work/doc/#change, but they let the community know the language is just as alive as it's ever been. Patches, minor optimizations, a few new built in functions, all of those can be used to keep projects alive.
- Camto
- Posts: 1
Re: Cobra is the best language I have ever known but why ina
Hi Charles.
I think that you created a well designed programming language and it is sad that is inactive.
I hope you will take the decision to migrate it on GitHub and that it could gain some traction, because you deserve if for all the efforts you put into it.
Many people would like to have a Python-like language with native static type checking and I think Cobra is quite close to this purpose.
Good luck!
I think that you created a well designed programming language and it is sad that is inactive.
I hope you will take the decision to migrate it on GitHub and that it could gain some traction, because you deserve if for all the efforts you put into it.
Many people would like to have a Python-like language with native static type checking and I think Cobra is quite close to this purpose.
Good luck!
- filippo
- Posts: 2
Re: Cobra is the best language I have ever known but why ina
Hi Charles.
What do you think about the possibility to let Cobra target .wasm. With wasi and Lucet it could become a language one can use on the server and at the same time it could benefits from the fact that it could enter into an ecosystem of interoperable modules written in C/C++/Rust and soon Go and compiled in Wasm.
Bye.
Filippo
What do you think about the possibility to let Cobra target .wasm. With wasi and Lucet it could become a language one can use on the server and at the same time it could benefits from the fact that it could enter into an ecosystem of interoperable modules written in C/C++/Rust and soon Go and compiled in Wasm.
Bye.
Filippo
- filippo
- Posts: 2
Re: Cobra is the best language I have ever known but why ina
Cobra is an excellent general-purpose imperative scripting language as it is able to do dynamic binding.
It should be brought back to life.
It should be brought back to life.
- TyraNoah
- Posts: 1
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