Back when autocompletion and stuff were only available in Visual Studio/Xcode/Other bug IDEs, I was forced to use Ruby and fell in love with it. It didn't matter what I used as my editor was Sublime. But when VSCode came and language features became democratized, I never touched a type-less language again. Why should someone opt for a language with absolutely no features where one can have autocompletion, typechecking, deep data type exploration, jumping to definitions and implementations? I really think it's a bad choice of Ruby not to care for types. And well we now have Crystal which again makes me question why Ruby? And it’s a shame no language is as beautiful as Ruby, not in features choices, design elegance, balance, beauty of the syntax, joy of programming mindset, not even in the name and logo. I wished Matz rethinked this part.
Static type-signatures are inevitable in general. You can see this by how even the Ruby documentation has to make up silly ad hoc notation like "→ array_of_strings", "→ matchdata or nil" etc.
As someone coming from Ruby to TypeScript, I find types cumbersome, verbose, complex, and not of much use. I have been writing and reading TS for the past six months. What am I missing?
I think Ruby is really great at what it tries to do. The only "problem" with it is that python kind of sucked the air out of the room and ruby got shoved into a little niche.
These languages are really quite similar in many ways, but their domains ended up diverging. With python becoming the layman / scientific / learning language of choice, ruby has been pigeon holed into mostly web development.
Both are really easy to pick up and learn for somebody unfamiliar with CS concepts and I personally find the ruby syntax far more intuitive.
We have a lot more options now. For a while people tried to use python and ruby as glue / systems programming languages, but with golang and rust you have really good and more performant options in that space. And as you say the tooling has improved massively, so the hurdle of moving on to a more "rigid" language is less than it ever was.
I still really like ruby, and I think rails is still a powerhouse due to solving so many real world problems in a really complete package, but the lack of adoption outside of that niche has left it dwindling in popularity.
Fully agree. Had to work in the past with ruby. Loved it but type errors during runtime where a thing and therefore I would never use ruby in production again.
Lack of types is one thing that turned me away from Elixir when I was trying to learn it.
I didn't know how to think about the types so I wanted some way to annotate them to help think through it, but went through it. And then the compiler complained at me I was passing in the wrong type to a function. I mean yes thanks? But also give me a way to figure that out BEFORE I try running the code.
Typing not being a natively ruby thing makes all efforts to type the language in place seem second class. Ruby needs a typed variant that compiles down to type less Ruby.
This was always true, to be honest. Statically typed languages have always been better. Free IDEs such as Eclipse have been available for a long time. Good JVM languages such as Scala have been available for a long time.
If only the Ruby ecosystem had adopted Scala instead of Ruby, with cutesy books and eccentric underscored personalities, history might have been different.
During my first Introduction to Programming course at university, I was taught Java. One thing that I found very troubling is that it wasn't easy, or possible in many cases, to change the programming language. Sure, you can write new functions or methods or classes, but I can't change the keyword for an if-statement. I also remember the TA saying "why would you want that?" I caught myself thinking "if we can program a computer, then why can't we program a language?"
15 years later, I still have this issue a bit, except I made my peace with it. It is what it is. There are some exceptions though! Such as: Lisp, Smalltalk and similar languages. It's in part why I have worked for a company that professionally programmed in Pharo (a Smalltalk descendant [2]). I remember hacking a very crude way for runtime type checking in Pharo [1], just for fun.
I'm not a Ruby programmer, all I know is that Ruby has some things that are identical to Smalltalk. But my question to the author would be: if you long for things like keyword arguments, type hints and namespaces why don't you program it in the Ruby language yourself?
Or is that really hard, like most other languages?
The language is the easy part. Getting tool support for your language change is the hard part. Getting the library ecosystem to adopt it is even harder.
I think that's why extremely flexible languages have seen limited adoption - if your language is more of a language construction kit where everyone can implement their own functionality, everyone has to implement their own tool support (or, more likely, live without any) and there's a limit to how far you can go with that. The best languages find the sweet spot where they give you enough flexibility to implement most reasonable programs, but are still constrained enough that tools can understand and work with all possible code.
There is metaprogramming support in Java, but it's not as inviting and friendly as hygienic macros or Ruby patching. The obvious example is reflection, with which you can do a lot of bizarre things, some of which are useful sometimes. Another is annotations, which is heavily used by libraries in a way similar to how macros are used in certain Lisp like languages.
The reason “custom” programming languages (sometimes called macros) are not popular is that (statistically) no one wants to learn a custom language for each project. People want to learn the basics as few times as possible. Orgs prefer to standardize, most businesses are not snowflakes.
It can be done, but it is not economical, and therefore not practical.
> I also remember the TA saying "why would you want that?"
Is a typical response of someone without the background and without the imagination. It may well be, that doing Java-only for too long robs one of both. An alternative response could have been: "What a fascinating idea! How would you apply that? / What would you do with that?"
I am happy for you, that you found the exceptions and that your picture of the computer programming world is not as incomplete and bleak as that of the TA back then.
> Python is not my favorite programming language. In fact, allow me to drop the euphemism and express my pure, unadulterated thoughts about it: I never liked Python, I see it as a huge red flag and I think the world would be a better place if we all decided to finally move on from it.
Why do people make hating a tool their entire personality? I have noticed this same thing with languages like Go ("oh no Go still bad") and C++. I don't like C++ myself but I don't hate it. It would be like hating a screwdriver.
If you don't like a language simply don't use it, there are hundreds of alternatives. If your employer is making you write in that language you should hate your employer, not the language.
If you do carpentry and you've previously lost a finger using a saw without a saw-stop, and now table saws with saw-stops are an option, you might rightly hate using table saws without one, to the point you wouldn't be willing to work at a shop that forces you to use one.
> Why do people make hating a tool their entire personality? I have noticed this same thing with languages like Go
It runs very deep for some people. "That's not Pythonic!" or "That's all unreadable line-noise!"
It becomes a kind of language bigotry similar to English-speakers hating a foreign language. And yet, as you rightly say, these are just programming tools.
I suppose that when humans invest in any type of language, they form and protect the orthodoxy.
> If you don't like a language simply don't use it, there are hundreds of alternatives. If your employer is making you write in that language you should hate your employer, not the language.
I think this is tricky. I work in the world of data and, although I like python fine, I'd find it very hard to find a role in my field that doesn't involve, if not working in python, then at least integrating very closely with work data-scientists produce that's in python.
Some languages just have a big dominance in their field. Python has that for data, and javascript for front-end.
Realistically there is only so much mindshare available, especially if you like the kind of language that benefits from extensive tooling. I miss the days when my preferred language was the #1 option in some spaces and had two first-class IDEs available; my life is genuinely worse now that that's no longer the case.
You haven't used many screwdrivers if you don't hate some of them for stripping screws, slicing your hand etc.
Likewise, other ones exist that make jobs super easy - be they having a ratchet, or quick change of bits, etc
Programming languages seem to be a pretty good parallel. Though, I don't see why Python in particular would be hated. It has its bullshit, but it's workable.
Eh, I wrote a lot of python back in the day, and it was pretty miserable experience back in the pre-2.6 era. If you had to use it for work, there was a pretty good chance you'd try to steer away from Python on your own time.
Modern python is a much better language across the board, even if the packaging/deployment story still needs some love
I'm a python developer, and a big fan of the features with gradual typing etc. This article really highlights for me though, how python has very much changed from the language it was even 5 years ago.
Initially, the celebrated feature of python was that it allowed easy and fast development for newcomers. There was a joke a long the lines, "I learned python, it was a great weekend".
As much as I like python's type system (and wouldn't want to see them ever go way!), part of me wonders if moving into a world where hello-world can look like this, is a world where python is no longer the "lean in a weekend" language:
from typing import Annotated
import typer
app = typer.Typer()
@app.command()
def main(
name: Annotated[str, typer.Option("--name", "-n")],
) -> None:
"""Prints out 'HELLO {name}!!' (name upper cased) to the console"""
print(f"HELLO {name:upper}!!")
if __name__ == "__name__":
app()
(obviously the example is silly, and I know this is a lot more than you need to do, hopefully you get my point though!)
> python is no longer the "learn in a weekend" language
For the last 10 years, Python's evolution has been directed by professional developers working for large software companies, and they've focused on adding features that help them work on million-line Python codebases.
Even if the language was originally intended to be easy to learn and ideal for small programs, that's clearly not a design goal any more.
Is there a language today that’s as easy to understand as the “executable pseudocode” of Python 2.x? I haven’t found one.
Agree but fortunately Python's types are entirely optional!
I'm very familiar with pyright and still I start most of my new projects without types and start sprinkling them in once I have a good base working already. This works so well that every time I pick up a static language I just get turned off by the friction of mandatory types and go back to Python. The only exception is Typescript where I can just Any everything temporarily as well.
All due respect but Typer looks like the kind of library that you want to use after your CLI has enough args that you wouldn't be able to get away with the sort of "Hello World" simplicity that you pine for.
Nobody's stopping you from manually parsing a couple of arguments. I still do it all the time and it's OK. If anything the magic of gradual typing is that you get to use it as necessity arises.
Ruby is such an elegant language, but the strong and ongoing hostility to any sort of sensible gradual typing is a real mistake.
I know that the Ruby community loves its clever runtime metaprogramming, but even the most metaprogrammed codebase is still going to consist mostly of plain old in-out methods. And as anyone who's ever typed a dynamic codebase knows, you pick up so much low-hanging fruit, in terms of edge cases and errors, when you slap some types on those. You don't need to type everything, but there is real hostility in Ruby circles to gradual typing, even where it would make sense and wouldn't impose any major costs.
Personally, I've stopped writing Ruby. Short of any pathway to sensible gradual typing, I just can't shake the feeling that every new line of Ruby is instant tech debt. Which is such a shame, since I find real beauty in the language.
I fully agree to the points here, even as a full time ruby lover. Jumping around different languages over the past 10 years really shows staleness in Ruby as a language, even if the ecosystem tries to keep up.
The ergonomics of ruby still have me very much liking the language as it fits how I think, but there are a lot of good developments in the usual neighbors, and I see myself picking up both Python and JS ever more for small projects.
Ruby fully typed would be awesome imo, but I know that goes against a lot of the fundamentals in the language. I just like the syntax and expressiveness of it, but coming from typescript, its just such a bad DX having to work in a large Ruby codebase.
I'm sort of the inverse of this author: I have always liked Python and disliked Ruby. It's true though that python has changed a lot, and it's a mixed bag IMHO. I think every language feature python has added can have a reasonable argument made for its existence, however collectively it kind of makes the language burgeon under the weight of its own complexity. "one way to do it" really hasn't been a hard goal for the language for a while.
I'm really charmed by ML style languages nowadays. I think python has built a lot of kludges to compensate for the fact that functions, assignments, loops, and conditionals are not expressions. You get comprehensions, lambdas, conditional expressions, the walrus operator... most statements have an expression equivalent now.
it seems like, initially, Guido was of the opinion that in most cases you should just write the statement and not try "to cram everything in-line," so to speak. However it can't be denied that there are cases where the in-line version just looks nice. On the other hand now you have a statement and an expression that is slightly different syntactically but equivalent semantically, and you have to learn both. Rust avoids this nicely by just making everything an expression, but you do get some semicolon-related awkwardness as a result.
I feel similar about "weight" in Python. Some people can really overdo it with the type annotations, wanting to annotate every little variable inside any procedure, even if as a human it is quite easy to infer its type and for the type checker the type is already clear. It adds so much clutter and at the end of the day I think: "Why aren't you just writing Java instead?" and that's probably where that notion originates from.
I used to be like that. When I did Java. I used to think to myself: "Oh neat! Everything has its place. interfaces, abstract classes, classes, methods, anonymous classes, ... everything fits neatly together."
That was before I learned more Python and realized: "Hey wait a moment, things that require me to write elaborate classes in Java are just a little bit of syntax in Python. For example decorators!" And slowly switched to Python.
Now it seems many Java-ers have come to Python, but without changing their mindset. Collectively they make it harder to enjoy using Python, because at workspaces they will mandate the most extreme views towards type annotations, turning Python into a Java dialect in some regards. But without the speed of Java. I have had feedback for a take-home assignment from an application process, where someone in all seriousness complained about me not using type annotations for what amounted to a single page of code(, and for using explanatory comments, when I was not given any guarantees of being able to talk with someone about the code - lol, the audacity).
Part of the problem is how people learn programming. Many people learn it at university, by using Java, and now think everything must work like Java. I mean, Java is honest about types, but it can also be annoying. Has gotten better though. But that message has not arrived yet at what I call the "Java-er mindset" when it comes to writing type annotations. In general languages or their type checkers have become quite good at inferring types.
Ruby has a unified interface for select/map/reduce over all containers. They do lazy calculations if specified. You can chain expressions simply by appending them at the end without scrolling to the back of the expression. That is objectively better than lisp and python.
Sure, you can always rewrite to match that style with macros in lisp and generators in python, but they weren't meant to be used that way.
Sad thing about ruby is how they failed to do typing. I love python's typing module. I think it is the single best thing about python and I wouldn't touch python with a pole if it didn't have that module.
I still like Ruby. 15+ years in, I find myself in the camp of not wanting it to change. 25 year old me would have been totally jazzed about the addition of namespaces in Ruby 3.5/4.0. 40 year old me wants namespaces to get off my Ruby lawn.
In your camp, waving a flag. I love ruby's simplicity when it comes to rapidly prototyping something, and find the wails about production type errors puzzling.
Only thing I've come near that gave me as much joy was Elixir, and I simply didn't have time to pick it up more than the most generic basics.
Doesn't Ruby essentially already have namespaces, in terms of having modules? If one has proper modules, why would one ever need an alternative, weaker, concept for referring to things?
As someone who loves Scheme (author of a Scheme exenstion for computer music, Scheme for Max), and who has done lots of Python and little Ruby, I find this odd. To me, Ruby is a much further departure from Scheme. At least in Python I can do something close to functional programming with primitives, though I don't get symbols. Ruby's "everything is an object" has always seemed to me to be even a further departure.
But then I really don't know Ruby, so happy to be told why this is wrong...
What looks like stagnation to Steen is actually [1] Matz’s remarkable foresight that provided stability and developer happiness.
Steen’s not wrong that Python evolved and Ruby moved slower, but he’s wrong to call Ruby stagnant or irrelevant. Just think what we've enjoyed in recent times: YJIT and MJIT massively improved runtime performance, ractors, the various type system efforts (RBS/Sorbet etc) that give gradual typing without cluttering the language etc.
Ruby’s priorities (ergonomics, DSLs, stability) are different[2] from Python’s (standardisation, academia/data). It’s a matter of taste and domain, not superiority.
My reaction to that part of the post was, “Well, it seems like Python needed to evolve while Ruby was better-designed from the beginning. That’s a failing of Python, not of Ruby.” Language stability is a good thing, which is why I prefer Clojure myself. I know enough Python and Ruby to be dangerous. I’m certainly no expert in either one. That said, Python always struck me as a bit of a hack, but people seemed to resonate with the “indentation is significant” syntax, whereas Ruby felt like it was better designed, taking “everything is an object” to its natural conclusion, similar to Smalltalk, but suffering from performance issues because that means lots of more heavyweight message dispatch.
I'm confused by this post because I think Sorbet satisfies basically all the things the author wants, and my experience with Sorbet has been really good!
It pales in comparison to what the author is talking about, editor support for instance is not good, it took them an awful lot of time to add support for linux-aarch64, it's in general rough around the edges (having to maintain various custom type files for some gems it cannot auto-generate type info for) and in general feels like a chore to use.
Yeah Python with uv and Pyright is downright tolerable. As long as you don't care at all about performance anyway (and can guarantee that you never will in future).
I'm going through the same processes as the author, after about a decade of Ruby I'm writing Typescript, Go and type-hinted Python, and I don't think I want to go back to the lack of namespaces/packages and the lack of typing.
And I've actually used Sorbet with Ruby for 2 years, but that seems like a really bad solution to this problem.
Languages come and go. There was a time when there was a huge momentum behind Ruby (and Rails). It is not (sadly) the case anymore. It is a matter of traction. C'est la vie. I remember back in the 90s there was great interest in Delphi (Borland OO language) but then came Java. I don't even know if someone is still coding in Delphi. I guess Ruby will eventually go the same way.
Typescript is a workaround.
It exists because web apps got more complex and browsers only support JavaScript.
So developers need to stick to JavaScript, but they need typing, therefore TypeScript has been implemented.
It’s an exception where it made sense to do so. For all other languages: if you use some dynamic language and you need typing, either wait until the language supports types natively (PHP‘s approach) or „just“ change the language.
The additional complexity of an additional typing layer is huge. The complexity of TypeScript - and in general JavaScript‘s ecosystem - is incredibly huge.
The biggest issue we have in software development is not that a language isn’t elegant, or you can’t write some some in 3 instead of 15 lines… the biggest problem is complexity. Developers too often forget about that. They focus on things that don’t matter. Ruby vs Python? It doesn’t make a real difference for web apps.
If you want a language and ecosystem with low complexity try Go. It’s not perfect. It’s not elegant. Or PHP, which has a lot of drawbacks, but overall less complexity. I don’t say Go or PHP are the best languages out there, but you should try them to get a picture - to decide for yourself what’s important and what not.
"I consider TypeScript to be the gold standard when it comes to type systems on top of dynamic languages."
Doubly weird, considering that TypeScript work was inspired by typed/racket, and TypeScript doesn't have a sound type system afaik and the OP's first love was Scheme.
This reads like a love letter to programming languages. You can never truly talk
about the quirks of a language without dabbling in it. And without experience with other languages - I doubt some of these quirks might even be seen as such.
Error handling for instance has always been my pet peeve. With dynamic languages like python, errors were all "exceptions". But then golang came along and decided
they'd be values and that only the truly exceptional errors should be "panicked".
But the if err != nil syntax became super verbose only after I learned about the
Result<Ok, Err> from Rust and the matching syntax associated with it.
A lot of people are shocked when they learn about ruby's monkey patching. I for one never truly groked the packaging of python applications until uv came along
to deliver an experience similar to npm.
And I agree, Typescript is the state of the art as far as static typing on top of a dynamic language is concerned. But I never considered it a programming language.
More like a tool to assist developers write/manage large javascript code.
In the end, I think the true reason for returning to pythong probably had more to do with getting a python gig. I live in the part of the world where my tech stack
ended up being influenced early on by the places I worked. I didn't mind learning Typescript for my first gig or improving my skills with nodejs.
In the end, every language can really get things done. And Typescript helps me pay
my bills and I couldn't be more grateful. Learn to love the quirks of your language and stop comparing it unfavorably with others. To date, I've never seen a language as elegant as ruby. Nor do I find an ecosystem better than python's at data science.
I’m pretty sure he understands that keyword arguments are part of Ruby. But they require special syntax. He appreciates that in Python _any_ argument is a keyword argument if you (the caller) want it to be.
I started my programming journey with VB6. Ruby reminds me of Visual Basic. But its never evolved past that. Python became popular because it was a scripting language that had classes and a nice built out framework of features. But it has a god awful syntax and should never be used for a large project. Also their package management is a dumpster fire.
This brings me to C#. At .NET 10 there will be another option then python. .NET 10 brings the ability to run C# script files without the need for a proj file or a main method. This will bring the full .NET Framework and NUGET eco system with it. I can't wait to replace all my python scripts with this.
I was a full-time Rubyist for a long time. I started the UK's first dedicated Ruby on Rails consultancy in 2006 before Rails was even v1.0 (IIRC the first apps I shipped back then were 0.8.6). I stuck around through the hype chain, and then started to help one employer break up a RoR monolith into micro services and adopt Java and Go (this was a mistake - we should have crafted the monolith better). I've built 4 startups as hands-on CTO with Ruby and Rails. It fed and housed me for many years.
In the last 5-7 years I've had to go in other directions. Clojure, Python, Java, even back to C and taking a look at Rust and Zig. I'm now in a role where I don't code so much, but I can see Ruby's problems - performance, the surprises, the fact it allows idiots to do idiotic things (nobody under the age of 40 should be legally allowed to monkey patch a base class or engage in meta programming).
And yet when I want to do something for me, for fun, perhaps advent of code, or a quick mock-up of something that's rolling around in my head, I reach for Ruby. Not elixir which has better runtimes, or C or Zig or Rust which has better performance, not something statically typed which leads to fewer bugs, not Python which has a huge data science community to it...
A few weeks ago I was listening to the DHH episode of the Lex Fridman podcast [0], where DHH talks about Ruby as a "luxury programming language". This matches my own experience.
When I need something to be fast, it's either because I'm dealing with a low-latency problem (and some of my side projects are very latency sensitive - 5ms can make the difference between success and failure), or because I can't afford the luxury of Ruby and Rails and the developer ergonomics.
Ruby makes things fun for the programmer. That's the point. It's beautiful to work with, even if it doesn't do all the things that all the coding books and blogs insist I should be ashamed to not have in my language.
I was slightly embarrassed to be a Ruby and RoR advocate for a while because of the brogrammer BS that emerged around both ecosystems in the 2010s. I then became very embarrassed because it wasn't as cool as a systems language like Rust or Go, or as intellectually deep as Haskell, or as hot on the ML bandwagon as Python.
But I think I don't care anymore. I'm just going to accept it for what it is, and lean into. Life's too short for "shoulds" - I'm just going to like what I like. And I like Ruby.
Ruby feels like a luxury manual hand saw. It fits in the hand perfectly. But it would not be my first choice for every project.
Languages like C#, Java, C++, Scala, Kotlin, and Python in 2025 feel like industrial computerized bandsaws with twenty different settings and controls. Some more complicated than others. They can be tuned to crank out a factories needs but you could spend days just fussing with a single setting that isn't right.
That being said, modern Python to me feels like the least thought out of these. It has been incrementally changed from one language to another, while being forced to keep many of the worst parts of both. To be honest, I think they should keep up the "breaking backwards compatibility" trend and make Python 4 an optionally-compiled, statically-typed language more like Go, but with more expressivity than Go.
I suppose F# is already like my ideal Python 4. It's possible to run as a script or compiled binary. It's a nice clean syntax, and the type system is a joy to use.
A valid F# program can be a single line script or dozens of configuration files. This let's the developer use it for quick and dirty work, then progressively tweak settings to run in a more industrial scale setting.
I've been on a similar journey. I was deep into rails early in my career. Then I moved on, especially liking typescript. I thought I wouldn't go back. But you don't always get the choice, a great job came up and it was a rails app. I found joy in it again - and I'm still there nearly 10 years on. Ruby feels like how OOP should be, it's so very easy to implement patterns that other languages make verbose and horrible. I'm guilty of a lot of metaprogramming, hope you forgive me, I am over 40. I think it can be an undervalued super power of the language: something isn't working or you need deeper insight, just break into the innards of any library you're using and insert logging and/or your own code.
Anyway, that said, for new personal projects I like typescript and rust. But recently I needed to stick an admin interface on such a project and rails shines there, you can get something good and secure stood up with less code and faff than anything else. In today's world of LLMs that is helpful too, rails is concise and old and has lots of open source projects to pull from, so AI breezes through it.
It's the never ending "end"s that bother me about Ruby.
class Mess
def chaos(x)
if x > 0
[1,2,3].each do |i|
case i
when 1
if i.odd?
puts "odd"
else
puts "even"
end
when 2
begin
puts "trying"
rescue
puts "failed"
end
else
puts "other"
end
end
else
puts "negative"
end
end
end
Clear away all those ends and the program logic pops out. Much fresher!
class Mess:
def chaos(self, x):
if x > 0:
for i in [1, 2, 3]:
match i:
case 1:
if i % 2 == 1:
print("odd")
else:
print("even")
case 2:
try:
print("trying")
except:
print("failed")
case _:
print("other")
else:
print("negative")
The indent in your Ruby code is a bit weird. It should be like this
class Mess
def chaos(x)
if x > 0
[1, 2, 3].each do |i|
case i
when 1
if i.odd?
puts "odd"
else
puts "even"
end
when 2
begin
puts "trying"
rescue
puts "failed"
end
else
puts "other"
end
end
else
puts "negative"
end
end
end
I would have done it this way instead
class Mess
def chaos(x)
if x > 0
[1, 2, 3].each do |i|
case i
when 1
puts i.odd? ? "odd" : "even"
when 2
puts "trying"
else
puts "other"
end
end
else
puts "negative"
end
end
end
Or if you allow me to create a separate private method
class Mess
def chaos(x)
return puts "negative" unless x > 0
[1, 2, 3].each { |i| handle_item(i) }
end
private
def handle_item(i)
case i
when 1 then puts(i.odd? ? "odd" : "even")
when 2 then puts "trying"
else puts "other"
end
end
end
I'll leave aside the unnecessary test for parity as contrived for the example.
This is a question of style; it's possible to write ruby the way you have but with experience you definitely wouldn't.
e.g.
Why wrap the iterator in an if..else..end block? You could replace that with a one line guard statement at the top of the method. No end required.
Why use begin..rescue..end in the middle of your example? Just replace that with a single rescue at the end of the method. Again, no end statement required.
This is like nesting 20 if..else blocks in python and then complaining you don't have a monitor big enough to view it without scrolling. You just wouldn't do it that way.
My hope is that with the new ruby parser rubocop will be more agressive about automatically refactoring examples like this away.
That Python code looks like it was punched in the belly and is about to fall down on itself like a Jenga tower. Additionally, the last `else` is hard to track visually and if you make the slightest error in whitespace (which are invisible characters!), everything breaks.
To each their own. It’s because we all have different preferences that there are so many choices.
pmkary|6 months ago
pansa2|6 months ago
Do you think Ruby could change something so fundamental as dynamic => static typing and still retain its beauty?
The only static typing solution I've seen for Ruby is Sorbet, and it's... not beautiful.
frou_dh|6 months ago
(Random example): https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/3.4/String.html#method-i-lines
matltc|6 months ago
JeremyNT|6 months ago
These languages are really quite similar in many ways, but their domains ended up diverging. With python becoming the layman / scientific / learning language of choice, ruby has been pigeon holed into mostly web development.
Both are really easy to pick up and learn for somebody unfamiliar with CS concepts and I personally find the ruby syntax far more intuitive.
We have a lot more options now. For a while people tried to use python and ruby as glue / systems programming languages, but with golang and rust you have really good and more performant options in that space. And as you say the tooling has improved massively, so the hurdle of moving on to a more "rigid" language is less than it ever was.
I still really like ruby, and I think rails is still a powerhouse due to solving so many real world problems in a really complete package, but the lack of adoption outside of that niche has left it dwindling in popularity.
theshrike79|6 months ago
VSCode was "good enough" for pretty much every language with LSP at that point, I did't even bother with Jetbrains ides outside of work after that.
And when Obsidian replaced org-mode for me, I deleted my .emacs directory from my dotfiles repository.
unknown|6 months ago
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AlwaysRock|6 months ago
This is undervalued. So frustrating in ruby that this doesnt exist or at least isnt easy.
javaunsafe2019|6 months ago
I use kotlin nowadays…
BariumBlue|6 months ago
I didn't know how to think about the types so I wanted some way to annotate them to help think through it, but went through it. And then the compiler complained at me I was passing in the wrong type to a function. I mean yes thanks? But also give me a way to figure that out BEFORE I try running the code.
parentheses|6 months ago
zarzavat|6 months ago
If only the Ruby ecosystem had adopted Scala instead of Ruby, with cutesy books and eccentric underscored personalities, history might have been different.
melvinroest|6 months ago
During my first Introduction to Programming course at university, I was taught Java. One thing that I found very troubling is that it wasn't easy, or possible in many cases, to change the programming language. Sure, you can write new functions or methods or classes, but I can't change the keyword for an if-statement. I also remember the TA saying "why would you want that?" I caught myself thinking "if we can program a computer, then why can't we program a language?"
15 years later, I still have this issue a bit, except I made my peace with it. It is what it is. There are some exceptions though! Such as: Lisp, Smalltalk and similar languages. It's in part why I have worked for a company that professionally programmed in Pharo (a Smalltalk descendant [2]). I remember hacking a very crude way for runtime type checking in Pharo [1], just for fun.
I'm not a Ruby programmer, all I know is that Ruby has some things that are identical to Smalltalk. But my question to the author would be: if you long for things like keyword arguments, type hints and namespaces why don't you program it in the Ruby language yourself?
Or is that really hard, like most other languages?
[1] https://youtu.be/FeFrt-kdvms?si=vlFPIkGuVceztVuW&t=2678
[2] Fun fact, I learned about Lisp, Smalltalk and Pharo through HN! So I know most of you know but I suspect some don't.
lmm|6 months ago
I think that's why extremely flexible languages have seen limited adoption - if your language is more of a language construction kit where everyone can implement their own functionality, everyone has to implement their own tool support (or, more likely, live without any) and there's a limit to how far you can go with that. The best languages find the sweet spot where they give you enough flexibility to implement most reasonable programs, but are still constrained enough that tools can understand and work with all possible code.
dale_glass|6 months ago
cess11|6 months ago
https://www.baeldung.com/java-reflection
https://www.baeldung.com/java-annotation-processing-builder
Then you've got the byte code itself, and there be dragons: <https://aphyr.com/posts/341-hexing-the-technical-interview>
While you rarely see byte code shenanigans in Java code bases, it's how some other languages on the JVM achieve things like runtime metaprogramming.
mixmastamyk|6 months ago
It can be done, but it is not economical, and therefore not practical.
zelphirkalt|6 months ago
Is a typical response of someone without the background and without the imagination. It may well be, that doing Java-only for too long robs one of both. An alternative response could have been: "What a fascinating idea! How would you apply that? / What would you do with that?"
I am happy for you, that you found the exceptions and that your picture of the computer programming world is not as incomplete and bleak as that of the TA back then.
nromiun|6 months ago
Why do people make hating a tool their entire personality? I have noticed this same thing with languages like Go ("oh no Go still bad") and C++. I don't like C++ myself but I don't hate it. It would be like hating a screwdriver.
If you don't like a language simply don't use it, there are hundreds of alternatives. If your employer is making you write in that language you should hate your employer, not the language.
pcthrowaway|6 months ago
mcdonje|6 months ago
> The reasons behind this choice of employment are very much unrelated to the technology stack.
Programming language isn't the only factor for employment. People don't always get to just change jobs when an aspect isn't ideal for them.
On top of that, python is ubiquitous in some sectors. It's not as easy to avoid as a lot of other languages.
heresie-dabord|6 months ago
It runs very deep for some people. "That's not Pythonic!" or "That's all unreadable line-noise!"
It becomes a kind of language bigotry similar to English-speakers hating a foreign language. And yet, as you rightly say, these are just programming tools.
I suppose that when humans invest in any type of language, they form and protect the orthodoxy.
mardifoufs|6 months ago
ninetyninenine|6 months ago
I know this is hard to understand for logical genius savants like you. A lot of HNers are like that and don’t understand human emotions.
benrutter|6 months ago
I think this is tricky. I work in the world of data and, although I like python fine, I'd find it very hard to find a role in my field that doesn't involve, if not working in python, then at least integrating very closely with work data-scientists produce that's in python.
Some languages just have a big dominance in their field. Python has that for data, and javascript for front-end.
lmm|6 months ago
lawn|6 months ago
This is just one such example and it's similar to how group dynamics with sport teams and politics work.
nchmy|6 months ago
Likewise, other ones exist that make jobs super easy - be they having a ratchet, or quick change of bits, etc
Programming languages seem to be a pretty good parallel. Though, I don't see why Python in particular would be hated. It has its bullshit, but it's workable.
jdhzzz|6 months ago
swiftcoder|6 months ago
Modern python is a much better language across the board, even if the packaging/deployment story still needs some love
frumiousirc|6 months ago
I hate Philips screwdrivers (but love JIS).
hecturchi|6 months ago
k__|6 months ago
/s
benrutter|6 months ago
Initially, the celebrated feature of python was that it allowed easy and fast development for newcomers. There was a joke a long the lines, "I learned python, it was a great weekend".
As much as I like python's type system (and wouldn't want to see them ever go way!), part of me wonders if moving into a world where hello-world can look like this, is a world where python is no longer the "lean in a weekend" language:
(obviously the example is silly, and I know this is a lot more than you need to do, hopefully you get my point though!)pansa2|6 months ago
For the last 10 years, Python's evolution has been directed by professional developers working for large software companies, and they've focused on adding features that help them work on million-line Python codebases.
Even if the language was originally intended to be easy to learn and ideal for small programs, that's clearly not a design goal any more.
Is there a language today that’s as easy to understand as the “executable pseudocode” of Python 2.x? I haven’t found one.
wraptile|6 months ago
I'm very familiar with pyright and still I start most of my new projects without types and start sprinkling them in once I have a good base working already. This works so well that every time I pick up a static language I just get turned off by the friction of mandatory types and go back to Python. The only exception is Typescript where I can just Any everything temporarily as well.
Daishiman|6 months ago
Nobody's stopping you from manually parsing a couple of arguments. I still do it all the time and it's OK. If anything the magic of gradual typing is that you get to use it as necessity arises.
lofties|6 months ago
blubber|6 months ago
pinoy420|6 months ago
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troad|6 months ago
I know that the Ruby community loves its clever runtime metaprogramming, but even the most metaprogrammed codebase is still going to consist mostly of plain old in-out methods. And as anyone who's ever typed a dynamic codebase knows, you pick up so much low-hanging fruit, in terms of edge cases and errors, when you slap some types on those. You don't need to type everything, but there is real hostility in Ruby circles to gradual typing, even where it would make sense and wouldn't impose any major costs.
Personally, I've stopped writing Ruby. Short of any pathway to sensible gradual typing, I just can't shake the feeling that every new line of Ruby is instant tech debt. Which is such a shame, since I find real beauty in the language.
Lio|6 months ago
I'm not sure what you're basing that on, gradual typing has been built into Ruby since 3.0 (2020). Sorbet can around a bit earlier in 2019.
There is on going work to improve both with RBS-Inline support now in Sorbet with runtime support hopefully on the way.
IRB uses RBS for autocompletion and Solargraph and Ruby-LSP both support it.
I would say there is no hostility to gradual typing in the Ruby community. Quite the opposite, people are being paid to work on it.
schappim|6 months ago
manuelfcreis|6 months ago
The ergonomics of ruby still have me very much liking the language as it fits how I think, but there are a lot of good developments in the usual neighbors, and I see myself picking up both Python and JS ever more for small projects.
khoury|6 months ago
sushibowl|6 months ago
I'm really charmed by ML style languages nowadays. I think python has built a lot of kludges to compensate for the fact that functions, assignments, loops, and conditionals are not expressions. You get comprehensions, lambdas, conditional expressions, the walrus operator... most statements have an expression equivalent now.
it seems like, initially, Guido was of the opinion that in most cases you should just write the statement and not try "to cram everything in-line," so to speak. However it can't be denied that there are cases where the in-line version just looks nice. On the other hand now you have a statement and an expression that is slightly different syntactically but equivalent semantically, and you have to learn both. Rust avoids this nicely by just making everything an expression, but you do get some semicolon-related awkwardness as a result.
zelphirkalt|6 months ago
I used to be like that. When I did Java. I used to think to myself: "Oh neat! Everything has its place. interfaces, abstract classes, classes, methods, anonymous classes, ... everything fits neatly together."
That was before I learned more Python and realized: "Hey wait a moment, things that require me to write elaborate classes in Java are just a little bit of syntax in Python. For example decorators!" And slowly switched to Python.
Now it seems many Java-ers have come to Python, but without changing their mindset. Collectively they make it harder to enjoy using Python, because at workspaces they will mandate the most extreme views towards type annotations, turning Python into a Java dialect in some regards. But without the speed of Java. I have had feedback for a take-home assignment from an application process, where someone in all seriousness complained about me not using type annotations for what amounted to a single page of code(, and for using explanatory comments, when I was not given any guarantees of being able to talk with someone about the code - lol, the audacity).
Part of the problem is how people learn programming. Many people learn it at university, by using Java, and now think everything must work like Java. I mean, Java is honest about types, but it can also be annoying. Has gotten better though. But that message has not arrived yet at what I call the "Java-er mindset" when it comes to writing type annotations. In general languages or their type checkers have become quite good at inferring types.
nurettin|6 months ago
Sure, you can always rewrite to match that style with macros in lisp and generators in python, but they weren't meant to be used that way.
Sad thing about ruby is how they failed to do typing. I love python's typing module. I think it is the single best thing about python and I wouldn't touch python with a pole if it didn't have that module.
wild_egg|6 months ago
dudeinjapan|6 months ago
codeduck|6 months ago
Only thing I've come near that gave me as much joy was Elixir, and I simply didn't have time to pick it up more than the most generic basics.
my mind just likes a.any? {|x| x.someCondition? }
zelphirkalt|6 months ago
futurecat|6 months ago
TiredOfLife|6 months ago
iainctduncan|6 months ago
But then I really don't know Ruby, so happy to be told why this is wrong...
postexitus|6 months ago
schappim|6 months ago
Steen’s not wrong that Python evolved and Ruby moved slower, but he’s wrong to call Ruby stagnant or irrelevant. Just think what we've enjoyed in recent times: YJIT and MJIT massively improved runtime performance, ractors, the various type system efforts (RBS/Sorbet etc) that give gradual typing without cluttering the language etc.
Ruby’s priorities (ergonomics, DSLs, stability) are different[2] from Python’s (standardisation, academia/data). It’s a matter of taste and domain, not superiority.
[1] I'm stealing a point DHH made on Lex's podcast. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vagyIcmIGOQ
[2] I'm once again parroting DHH/Matz
drob518|6 months ago
ZephyrBlu|6 months ago
adamors|6 months ago
unknown|6 months ago
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brainzap|6 months ago
IshKebab|6 months ago
adamors|6 months ago
And I've actually used Sorbet with Ruby for 2 years, but that seems like a really bad solution to this problem.
Alifatisk|6 months ago
jbrisson|6 months ago
ckdot|6 months ago
sriku|6 months ago
Doubly weird, considering that TypeScript work was inspired by typed/racket, and TypeScript doesn't have a sound type system afaik and the OP's first love was Scheme.
jemiluv8|6 months ago
Error handling for instance has always been my pet peeve. With dynamic languages like python, errors were all "exceptions". But then golang came along and decided they'd be values and that only the truly exceptional errors should be "panicked". But the if err != nil syntax became super verbose only after I learned about the Result<Ok, Err> from Rust and the matching syntax associated with it.
A lot of people are shocked when they learn about ruby's monkey patching. I for one never truly groked the packaging of python applications until uv came along to deliver an experience similar to npm.
And I agree, Typescript is the state of the art as far as static typing on top of a dynamic language is concerned. But I never considered it a programming language. More like a tool to assist developers write/manage large javascript code.
In the end, I think the true reason for returning to pythong probably had more to do with getting a python gig. I live in the part of the world where my tech stack ended up being influenced early on by the places I worked. I didn't mind learning Typescript for my first gig or improving my skills with nodejs.
In the end, every language can really get things done. And Typescript helps me pay my bills and I couldn't be more grateful. Learn to love the quirks of your language and stop comparing it unfavorably with others. To date, I've never seen a language as elegant as ruby. Nor do I find an ecosystem better than python's at data science.
hk1337|6 months ago
I work in Python and PHP every day though.
KevinMS|6 months ago
pedrorolo|6 months ago
Keyword arguments and destructing assignments are there.
gsinclair|6 months ago
boombapoom|6 months ago
DonnyV|6 months ago
This brings me to C#. At .NET 10 there will be another option then python. .NET 10 brings the ability to run C# script files without the need for a proj file or a main method. This will bring the full .NET Framework and NUGET eco system with it. I can't wait to replace all my python scripts with this.
RobinL|6 months ago
PaulRobinson|6 months ago
In the last 5-7 years I've had to go in other directions. Clojure, Python, Java, even back to C and taking a look at Rust and Zig. I'm now in a role where I don't code so much, but I can see Ruby's problems - performance, the surprises, the fact it allows idiots to do idiotic things (nobody under the age of 40 should be legally allowed to monkey patch a base class or engage in meta programming).
And yet when I want to do something for me, for fun, perhaps advent of code, or a quick mock-up of something that's rolling around in my head, I reach for Ruby. Not elixir which has better runtimes, or C or Zig or Rust which has better performance, not something statically typed which leads to fewer bugs, not Python which has a huge data science community to it...
A few weeks ago I was listening to the DHH episode of the Lex Fridman podcast [0], where DHH talks about Ruby as a "luxury programming language". This matches my own experience.
When I need something to be fast, it's either because I'm dealing with a low-latency problem (and some of my side projects are very latency sensitive - 5ms can make the difference between success and failure), or because I can't afford the luxury of Ruby and Rails and the developer ergonomics.
Ruby makes things fun for the programmer. That's the point. It's beautiful to work with, even if it doesn't do all the things that all the coding books and blogs insist I should be ashamed to not have in my language.
I was slightly embarrassed to be a Ruby and RoR advocate for a while because of the brogrammer BS that emerged around both ecosystems in the 2010s. I then became very embarrassed because it wasn't as cool as a systems language like Rust or Go, or as intellectually deep as Haskell, or as hot on the ML bandwagon as Python.
But I think I don't care anymore. I'm just going to accept it for what it is, and lean into. Life's too short for "shoulds" - I'm just going to like what I like. And I like Ruby.
[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vagyIcmIGOQ
JackMorgan|6 months ago
Languages like C#, Java, C++, Scala, Kotlin, and Python in 2025 feel like industrial computerized bandsaws with twenty different settings and controls. Some more complicated than others. They can be tuned to crank out a factories needs but you could spend days just fussing with a single setting that isn't right.
That being said, modern Python to me feels like the least thought out of these. It has been incrementally changed from one language to another, while being forced to keep many of the worst parts of both. To be honest, I think they should keep up the "breaking backwards compatibility" trend and make Python 4 an optionally-compiled, statically-typed language more like Go, but with more expressivity than Go.
I suppose F# is already like my ideal Python 4. It's possible to run as a script or compiled binary. It's a nice clean syntax, and the type system is a joy to use.
A valid F# program can be a single line script or dozens of configuration files. This let's the developer use it for quick and dirty work, then progressively tweak settings to run in a more industrial scale setting.
jemmyw|6 months ago
Anyway, that said, for new personal projects I like typescript and rust. But recently I needed to stick an admin interface on such a project and rails shines there, you can get something good and secure stood up with less code and faff than anything else. In today's world of LLMs that is helpful too, rails is concise and old and has lots of open source projects to pull from, so AI breezes through it.
fuckaj|6 months ago
wewewedxfgdf|6 months ago
Alifatisk|6 months ago
Lio|6 months ago
This is a question of style; it's possible to write ruby the way you have but with experience you definitely wouldn't.
e.g.
Why wrap the iterator in an if..else..end block? You could replace that with a one line guard statement at the top of the method. No end required.
Why use begin..rescue..end in the middle of your example? Just replace that with a single rescue at the end of the method. Again, no end statement required.
This is like nesting 20 if..else blocks in python and then complaining you don't have a monitor big enough to view it without scrolling. You just wouldn't do it that way.
My hope is that with the new ruby parser rubocop will be more agressive about automatically refactoring examples like this away.
latexr|6 months ago
To each their own. It’s because we all have different preferences that there are so many choices.
devoutsalsa|6 months ago
unknown|6 months ago
[deleted]
cHaOs667|6 months ago
class Mess
endPaulRobinson|6 months ago
Of course you can get all this down to a single line with ; demarcation.
And your `.each` could use `{ ... }` syntax, just like C or Java or... you know, everything else.
But sure, whitespace is better, or whatever it is you prefer.