skrebbel 10 hours ago

Unrelated side note, but I haven't written any Ruby in maybe 15 years or so and dammn I forgot how elegant the language is at its core. The author's AppVersion class is so nicely done, it's nuts how succinct eg the compare implementation is.

Having done mostly TypeScript and Elixir lately, I had forgotten things could be so succinct yet so clear. The combo of modern (to me) Ruby's lambda syntax (in the .map call), parentheses-less function calls, the fact that arrays implement <=> by comparing each item in order, that there's an overloadable compare operator at all, having multiple value assignments in one go... It all really adds up!

In any other language I can think of real quick (TS, Elixir, C#, Python, PHP, Go) a fair number of these parts would be substantially more wordy or syntaxy at little immediately obvious benefit. Like, this class is super concise but it doesn't trade away any readability at all.

Having learned Ruby before Rails became commonplace, with its love for things that automagically work (until they don't), I had kinda grown to dislike it. But had forgotten how core Ruby is just an excellent programming language, regardless of what I think of the Rails ecosystem.

  • dlisboa 9 hours ago

    Ruby trades away quite a few things for readability. It's beautiful but a lot is being hidden.

    Some of those languages would have you deal with the problem of allocating multiple arrays in the heap just to compare three numbers. Or give you tools to outlaw passing invalid strings to AppVersion.new (quick: what is the comparison between AppVersions "foo" and "bar"?).

    Plus you have very few tools to ensure code remains beautiful. I've worked with Ruby for close to two decades, almost nothing in the real world looks that clean. Take a look at the Gem::Version#<=> implementation that the article talks about: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/blob/master/lib/rubygems/versio...

    • jimbokun 8 hours ago

      Wow I wonder why it's so verbose. Performance optimizations? Seems like this wouldn't be called often enough to show up in any performance profiling exercise.

      • dlisboa 8 hours ago

        Ruby is very slow so you gotta squeeze everything you can everywhere. Even a seemingly simple method will have to be scrutinized so that overall performance isn't impacted. It's death by a thousand cuts.

        See the commit that made it complex: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/commit/9b49ba5a68486e42afd83db4...

        It claims 20-50% speedups in some cases.

        There's churn that comes with that. Ruby will have code that is ever changing to gain 5%, 10% performance every now and then. You gotta put that on balance: in a language like Go this method would've been ugly from the start but no one would've needed to touch it in 100 years.

        • BurningFrog 5 hours ago

          You never gotta squeeze everything you can everywhere!

          Regardless of how slow the language is, the 90/10 rule applies: 90% of the time is spent in 10% of the code. Optimize that 10%! Making the rest of the code faster isn't worth the code quality cost.

          • ben-schaaf 13 minutes ago

            That's a rule that might hold for applications and services. It does not hold for languages and libraries, where any and every aspect is going to be the bottleneck in someone else's code. It's a different 10% for each user.

        • jfabre 7 hours ago

          There are plenty of businesses that have under 10k users and can live perfectly well with http requests around 500-1000 ms. When there are performance issues, 95% of the times they come from the database, not the language.

          • 9rx 5 hours ago

            > When there are performance issues, 95% of the times they come from the database, not the language.

            DHH used to say that it didn't matter if Rails was slow because the database was I/O bound anyway. But that was a long time ago. Times have changed considerably. Most especially because DHH now promotes using SQLite, which completely takes the worst I/O offender right out of the picture. Nowadays the language (when it is as slow as Ruby) is most likely to be the problem.

            • dmix 2 hours ago

              > Nowadays the language (when it is as slow as Ruby) is most likely to be the problem.

              These days the main issue why web apps are slow or fragile is because they are huge React apps that do way too much in the browser than they need too. The response time from the server is rarely the issue unless you're doing heavy analytics. High end React shops do some crazy optimization to try to compensate for this fact. Linear is the only one I've seen do it well with JS.

            • jfabre 3 hours ago

              Doesn't matter if SQLite is now viable with rails, no legacy rails app is using it and it's not like you're going to wake up one morning and migrate your production db from postgres, mysql, sql server or oracle just because you felt like it.

              In theory the language is slow, in practice it doesn't really matter because the db is much slower unless you're github or twitter and you really need to scale.

              When you choose ruby, you trade faster dev time for slower runtime. I am OK with this trade-off 99% of the time. My dev time costs way more than a couple ms lost on my production server.

            • AdieuToLogic 2 hours ago

              >> When there are performance issues, 95% of the times they come from the database, not the language.

              > DHH used to say that it didn't matter if Rails was slow because the database was I/O bound anyway. But that was a long time ago. ... Nowadays the language (when it is as slow as Ruby) is most likely to be the problem.

              Nowadays CPU speeds, available RAM, and network speeds dwarf what was top-of-the-line "a long time ago," making the trope of "Ruby is too slow" much less believable "nowadays."

          • dlisboa 7 hours ago

            I somewhat agree. In general most apps are small where the language choice doesn’t really matter.

            Caching is also vastly underutilized, most apps are read-heavy and could serve a significant portion of their requests from some form of caching.

            > When there are performance issues, 95% of the times they come from the database, not the language.

            Eh, statements like these are always too hand wavy. Resource usage has to do with performance, the DB has no fault in it but the runtime does.

            Having worked with Rails a ton there’s a very large overhead. Most apps would see a significant speed up if rewritten in a faster language and framework, with no changes to the DB whatsoever. The amount of memory and CPU expended to the app servers is always significant, often outweighing the DB.

            • jfabre 3 hours ago

              But what do you mean, give me a real example. You loaded too many active_records in memory and it's using a ton of ram? Did you try pluck, batches or even skipping active_record and using a raw query?

              Unless you really need to scale for a ton of users, you don't have to go crazy to get decent performances out of rails/ruby. How many requests/sec are we even talking about here?

  • _old_dude_ 7 hours ago

    Yes, the version in Java is clearly less elegant. Java has map+lambda and compareTo (<=>) but no tuple assignemnt and no splat.

        record AppVersion(int major, int minor, int patch) implements Comparable<AppVersion> {
          public static AppVersion of(String version) {
            var array = Arrays.copyOf(Arrays.stream(version.split("\\.")).mapToInt(Integer::parseInt).toArray(), 3);
            return new AppVersion(array[0], array[1], array[2]);
          }
    
          public int compareTo(AppVersion other) {
            return Comparator.comparingInt(AppVersion::major)
                .thenComparingInt(AppVersion::minor)
                .thenComparingInt(AppVersion::patch)
                .compare(this, other);
          }
    
          public String toString() {
            return "%d.%d.%d".formatted(major, minor, patch);
          }
        }
    • spullara 6 hours ago

      Also the copyOf isn't really the same as being able to || things since it just happens both copyOf default is 0 and in this case it is also 0 (i.e. what if it was -1 to indicate there was no version).

  • vault 9 hours ago

    Like you, I remember 15 years ago when I decided to solve Project Euler in Ruby, a completely new language to me. I still remember the joy I was feeling when I started coding with this new language. So elegant! So natural! Like it was made to fit my brain. It's a pity I ended up working professionally with entirely different stuff.

  • AdieuToLogic 2 hours ago

    > In any other language I can think of real quick (TS, Elixir, C#, Python, PHP, Go) a fair number of these parts would be substantially more wordy or syntaxy at little immediately obvious benefit. Like, this class is super concise but it doesn't trade away any readability at all.

    Scala would like to have a terse say about this... :-)

    • pxc an hour ago

      Scala also draws on many other sources, but syntactically it clearly takes inspiration from Ruby in a lot of nice ways!

  • js2 9 hours ago

    Challenge accepted:

        from dataclasses import dataclass
        
        @dataclass(frozen=True, order=True)
        class AppVersion:
            major: int = 0
            minor: int = 0
            patch: int = 0
        
            @classmethod
            def from_string(cls, version_string: str):
                return cls(*[int(x) for x in version_string.split(".")])
        
            def __str__(self):
                return f"{self.major}.{self.minor}.{self.patch}"
    
    
    Before dataclasses you could've used namedtuples, at a loss of attribute typing and default initializer:

        from collections import namedtuple
        
        class AppVersion(namedtuple("AppVersion", "major minor patch")):
    
            @classmethod
            def from_string(cls, version_string: str):
                parts = [int(x) for x in version_string.split(".")] + [0, 0]
                return cls(*parts[:3])
        
            def __str__(self):
                return f"{self.major}.{self.minor}.{self.patch}"
    • pansa2 8 hours ago

      You could also use a normal class, a direct translation of the Ruby example:

          @functools.total_ordering
          class AppVersion:
            def __init__(self, version_string):
              parts = [int(x) for x in str(version_string).split('.')]
              self.major, self.minor, self.patch = parts[0] or 0, parts[1] or 0, parts[2] or 0
      
            def __lt__(self, other):
              return [self.major, self.minor, self.patch] < [other.major, other.minor, other.patch]
      
            def __eq__(self, other):
              return [self.major, self.minor, self.patch] == [other.major, other.minor, other.patch]
      
            def __str__(self):
              return f'{self.major}.{self.minor}.{self.patch}'
    • sczi 7 hours ago

      Nice solution with dataclass! And for a complete comparison with the blog you can also use a library to do it for you. It's not quite in the official python distribution but it's maintained by pypa as a dependency of pip so you probably have it installed already.

          >>> from packaging.version import Version
          >>> Version("1.2.3") > Version("1.2.2")
          True
          >>> Version("2.0") > Version("1.2.2")
          True
      • js2 6 hours ago

        packaging.version has a somewhat weird (or at least Python-specific) set of rules that don't match the semantics of Ruby's Gem:Version, which will accept basically anything as input.

        I'd use `semver` from PyPI and whatever the equivalent Gem is on the Ruby side in most cases.

    • alberth 9 hours ago

      Not knowing python, I find the data classes example extremely readable. More so than Ruby example.

      • disgruntledphd2 9 hours ago

        I write mostly Python these days, but agree with op. The comparables implementation in Ruby seems much nicer to me (maybe because I'm less familiar with it).

        • js2 8 hours ago

          It's virtually the same in Python if you wrote it explicitly:

              def <=>(other)
                  [major, minor, patch] <=> [other.major, other.minor, other.patch]
              end
          
          vs:

              def __lt__(self, other):
                  return (self.major, self.minor, self.patch) < (other.major, other.minor, other.patch)
          
          Then use the `total_ordering` decorator to provide the remaining rich comparison methods.

          That said, it's a little annoying Python didn't keep __cmp__ around since there's no direct replacement that's just as succinct and what I did above is a slight fib: you still may need to add __eq__() as well.

          • zahlman 5 hours ago

            > Then use the `total_ordering` decorator to provide the remaining rich comparison methods.

            While we're here, worth highlighting `cmp_to_key` as well for `sorted` etc. calls.

            > it's a little annoying Python didn't keep __cmp__ around since there's no direct replacement that's just as succinct

            The rationale offered at the time (https://docs.python.org/3/whatsnew/3.0.html) was admittedly weak, but at least this way there isn't confusion over what happens if you try to use both ways (because one of them just isn't a way any more).

      • jimbokun 8 hours ago

        However, I think comparing the Ruby example implementation with the "data classes example" is a category error.

        The Ruby example should be compared to the implementation of data classes. The Ruby code shows how cleanly the code for parsing, comparing and printing a version string can be. We would need to see the code underlying the data classes implementation to make a meaningful comparison.

      • jimbokun 9 hours ago

        It's a little magicky. I guess the "Order=True" is what ensures the order of the parameters in the auto-generated constructor matches the order in which the instance variables are defined?

        • js2 8 hours ago

          order: If true (the default is False), __lt__(), __le__(), __gt__(), and __ge__() methods will be generated. These compare the class as if it were a tuple of its fields, in order.

          eq: If true (the default), an __eq__() method will be generated. This method compares the class as if it were a tuple of its fields, in order. Both instances in the comparison must be of the identical type.

  • chamomeal 2 hours ago

    I don’t know any ruby but I dabbled in elixir and I gotta ask: why do you prefer parenthesis-less function calls?

    I like when parens/brackets are reliable wrappers for chunks of code. Like being able to ‘vi{‘ in vim to select a function body. Or ‘%’ to jump to the matching paren.

    Do you find the language more readable without it? Less visual noise?

  • zumu 5 hours ago

    It allocates 2 collections for every compare call and obfuscates the comparison logic. Personally I find that extremely inelegant. Different strokes I suppose.

  • joemasilotti 8 hours ago

    > The author's AppVersion class is so nicely done, it's nuts how succinct eg the compare implementation is.

    Why thank you! :D

  • shevy-java 8 hours ago

    > But had forgotten how core Ruby is just an excellent programming language, regardless of what I think of the Rails ecosystem.

    A problem is that ruby lost many developres; rails too but it is by far the biggest driver in ruby. And this creates problems, because it overshadows the remaining ruby developers.

    • ajoski9 5 hours ago

      Is that true. Feels like new Ruby versions and great updates are being churned out relatively fast these days.

  • __jonas 9 hours ago

    I don't really know Ruby, what is the to_s doing in

           parts = version_string.to_s.split(”.”).map(&:to_i)
    
    Is it to_string? Isn't version_string already a string?
    • jimbokun 9 hours ago

      Yes, to_s returns the string representation of an object.

      I think it's a safety measure in case the argument passed in is not a string, but can be turned into a string. Safe to assume that calling "to_s" on a string just returns the string.

    • raincole 8 hours ago

      It's trying to make it more 'type tolerant' so it accepts both string and int and perhaps other types that implement `to_s`.

      It's also a quite bad practice to my eye.

    • dlisboa 8 hours ago

      Ruby is a dynamic language, `version_string` can be anything. The author uses `to_s` to coerce it into a string. There are problems with that: if I pass in an array it'll coerce into `"[1,2,3]".split(".").map(&:to_i)`, which makes no sense.

      • shevy-java 8 hours ago

        One could do a conversion e. g.

            if x.is_a? Array
              x = x.first
        
        Or something like that. Could be one line too:

            x = x.first if x.is_a? Array
        • dlisboa 8 hours ago

          Most times it's better to just accept the dynamic nature of the language rather than do this kind of runtime type checking. You'd have to do this `.is_a?` dance for every type to have it be reliable.

          Even if you implement an "interface" (duck typing) with `respond_to?(:to_app_version)` you still can't be sure that the return type of this `:to_app_version` is actually a string you can call `split()` on.

    • weaksauce 8 hours ago

      it is a string usually but could be called with a single number or some other object that has that method overwritten and it would still do the right thing.

    • iamjs 8 hours ago

      it could be anything, but virtually everything implements `#to_s`.

      • zahlman 5 hours ago

        ... But maybe not in a way that happens to be a good idea in the current context.

    • metalliqaz 8 hours ago

      it allows you to initialize an AppVersion with an other AppVersion object

  • zahlman 5 hours ago

    > modern (to me) Ruby's lambda syntax (in the .map call)

    It's syntactic sugar for what Ruby does with a lambda, but fundamentally the purpose is to extract a method from the input. Python has that in the standard library, as `operator.attrgetter`. But also in Python, you generally convert by passing to the type constructor rather than calling a method; so you can just use that directly.

    > parentheses-less function calls

    Only methods are called here, not plain functions. You can get this effect in many other languages by defining properties instead of zero-argument methods.

    > the fact that arrays implement <=> by comparing each item in order

    This is also done in Python, and probably many other languages.

    > that there's an overloadable compare operator at all, having multiple value assignments in one go

    Idem.

    > In any other language I can think of real quick (TS, Elixir, C#, Python, PHP, Go) a fair number of these parts would be substantially more wordy or syntaxy at little immediately obvious benefit.

    A relatively direct translation looks like:

      import functools 
    
      @functools.total_ordering
      class AppVersion:
        def __init__(self, version_string):
          self.major, self.minor, self.patch, *_ = map(int, str(version_string).split('.'))
        def __lt__(self, other):
          return (self.major, self.minor, self.patch) < (other.major, other.minor, other.patch)
        def __eq__(self, other):
          return (self.major, self.minor, self.patch) == (other.major, other.minor, other.patch)
        def __str__(self):
          return f'{self.major}.{self.minor}.{self.patch}'
    
    You don't need any `end`s, but you don't (in 3.x) have the convenience of a direct `<=>` analog (it used to be `__cmp__`). The actual integer conversion function could be done differently, of course, to handle invalid values (I don't know why the Ruby code is doing the `|| 0` business; `to_i` already takes care of that AFAICT).

    Although the rough ecosystem equivalent of Gem::Version (https://github.com/pypa/packaging/blob/main/src/packaging/ve...) does much more sophisticated parsing. And you could also get the comparison logic by leveraging `collections.namedtuple`, `typing.NamedTuple` (but changing the initialization logic isn't so neat for these immutable types), `dataclasses.dataclass` etc. as in js2's reply.

  • kelvinjps10 7 hours ago

    I have always found python very succint, is ruby even more?

adverbly 11 hours ago

If you ignore performance and mathematical elegance and safety and just look at how much a language lets you get away with from a productivity standpoint, I think Ruby is a pretty standout winner and nobody else even comes close really...

Very clear APIs and syntax(with the possible exception of blocks which can be weird because they aren't quite functions), and tons of raw metaprogramming powers.

You can argue it sacrifices too much of the other things to deliver on these things, but it's hard to argue against it doing well at what it optimizes for!

  • jnovek 11 hours ago

    I love writing Ruby. It’s one of the most pleasant and elegant languages I’ve used… but the footguns it comes equipped with rival those of Perl.

    • ajoski9 5 hours ago

      Agreed. Also pretty to look at IMHO

  • jimbokun 8 hours ago

    Various Lisps can give it a run for its money, depending on the problem.

    Metaprogramming is Lisp's canonical super power. Ruby is going to win out on tasks where it has built in syntax, like matching regular expressions.

    But once you get to metaprogramming Lisp macros are going to give Ruby a run for its money.

    I will say one of the under appreciated aspects of Ruby is the consistency of its semantics, where everything is message passing very much like Smalltalk.

  • shevy-java 8 hours ago

    Right. But ruby also has awful crap. The documentation - look at opal, webassembly and many other projects in ruby. The documentation is just total garbage.

    rubygems.org also has decided to, rather than fix on existing problems, eliminate all former maintainers and instead put in Hiroshi Shibata as the solo lead - the same guy who keeps on writing on different github issue trackers how he does not have time to handle any issue requests for low-used projects. Wowsers.

  • chihuahua 8 hours ago

    "If you ignore performance and safety..."

    Other than that, how was the play, Mrs. Lincoln?

    Also, add readability and maintainability to that list, and scaling to a large codebase. And good debugger support.

iagooar 11 hours ago

Ruby has a lot of these hidden gems (pun intended).

I wouldn't be as much in love with programming, if it wasn't for Ruby. And although I use many other programming languages these days, Ruby will forever have a special place in my heart.

  • netghost 9 hours ago

    A long while back I wrote a bunch of articles covering some of the standard library: https://snakeshands.com/series/ruby_standard_library/

    Ruby, and Ruby on Rails is a treasure trove of little handy bits you can use if you just know where to look. I really miss some aspects of ruby (I just don't have a chance to use it these days).

    • dmix an hour ago

      I'm worried LLMs will make people ignore what's already there and auto generate useless functions instead of using what's there in Ruby/Rails. I've been using Rails for almost 20yrs (on and off) and I can't count the number of times I did something only to find out it was either natively supported in a recent version... or at least a new best practice in modern Rails.

      You find the same thing with JS to an even higher degree, but there's always 10 options in NPM and they all need to be updated every year otherwise the other 20+ packages you depend on can't be upgraded. There's a stark contrast in maintenance overhead and DX between frontend and server side.

      Even the rails JS libraries are very stable. Hotwire's Stimulus hasn't had a release since 2023 and it always works just fine. https://github.com/hotwired/stimulus/releases

  • matltc 11 hours ago

    Agreed. Was looking around for STL files so I could print a ruby and put it on my desk.

    Glad to see it's getting love on here recently.

lloeki 11 hours ago

> it’s built into Ruby!

Nitpick: technically `Gem::Version` is part of `rubygems`, and while `rubygems` is (typically) packaged with Ruby, it's actually entirely optional, so much so that `rubygems` actually monkeypatches† Ruby core's `Kernel` (notably `require`) to inject gem functionality.

MRuby has none of it, and CRuby has a `--disable-rubygems` configure flag.

Back in 1.8 days, you even had to manually require `rubygems`!

https://github.com/ruby/rubygems/tree/4e4d2b32353c8ded870c14...

  • dragonwriter 9 hours ago

    Nitpicking your nitpick, but Ruby’s standard library has three components:

    * default libraries (these are maintained by the Ruby core team, delivered with Ruby, and upgraded only as part of Ruby version upgrades.)

    * default gems (these are maintained by the Ruby core team, delivered with Ruby, not removable, can be required directly just like default libraries, but can be updated separately from Ruby version upgrades.)

    * bundled gems (these are gems that are delivered and installed with Ruby, but which can be upgraded separately or removed.)

    Rubygems is a default gem. [0] It used to not be part of the standard library, but it has been since Ruby 1.9, released in 2007.

    [0] see, https://stdgems.org/

    • zahlman 5 hours ago

      Frankly I wish Python's standard library were more like this. Maybe then we wouldn't be seeing tens of millions of daily downloads of pip (most likely orchestrated by other copies of pip!), requests (already vendored by pip!), setuptools, six (compatibility wrappers for ancient 2.x code, declared as a dependency by python-dateutil so that it can keep supporting 2.x, even though it's overwhelmingly downloaded for up-to-date Python installations)....

      ...There are presumably many other ways to solve that problem, but still.

jaredcwhite 8 hours ago

Ruby is an awesome language. The first few 3.x releases brought incredible modern advancements, including pattern matching which I totally adore.

I'd love to see a lot more writing and advocacy around Ruby, and not Ruby/Rails. I don't use Ruby/Rails! I use Ruby. And I suspect a lot of folks who have left Ruby behind over the years might not realize some (many?) of their gripes are not with Ruby in general, but Rails in particular.

Bergrebell 8 hours ago

Going back to rails after all this JS years was the best decision we’ve ever made. Current state of rails is lit!

websitescenes 8 hours ago

Damn, I miss ruby and particularly Rails sooo much. I'm stuck rebuilding wheels in node currently :)

kazinator 8 hours ago

TXR Lisp:

  $ txr -i version.tl
  1> (equal (new (app-ver "1.2.003")) (new (app-ver "1.2.3")))
  t
  2> (equal (new (app-ver "1.2.003")) (new (app-ver "1.2.4")))
  nil
  3> (less (new (app-ver "1.2")) (new (app-ver "1.2.3")))
  t
  4> (greater (new (app-ver "1.2")) (new (app-ver "1.2.3")))
  nil
  5> (tostringp (new (app-ver "1.2.3.4")))
  "1.2.3.4"
  6> (tostring (new (app-ver "1.2.3.4")))
  "#S(app-ver str \"1.2.3.4\" vec (1 2 3 4))"
Code:

  (defstruct (app-ver str) ()
    str
    vec
    (:postinit (me)
      (set me.vec (flow me.str (spl ".") (mapcar int-str))))
    (:method equal (me) me.vec)
    (:method print (me stream pretty-p)
      (if pretty-p (put-string `@{me.vec "."}` stream) :)))
  • kazinator 6 hours ago

    These objects can be inserted into a hash table, and are keyed by their semantic value, not the string:

      1> (hash)
      #H(())
      2> *1
      #H(())
      3> (set [*1 (new (app-ver "1.2.3.0004"))] 'mapped)
      mapped
      4> *1
      #H(() (#S(app-ver str "1.2.3.0004" vec (1 2 3 4)) mapped))
      5> [*1 (new (app-ver "1.2.3.4"))]
      mapped
      6> [*1 (new (app-ver "1.2.03.4"))]
      mapped
      7> [*1 (new (app-ver "1.2.02.4"))]
      nil
aldousd666 9 hours ago

I discovered this a few years ago when someone who didn't understand what semver is was trying to do a rails version upgrade for us. They were practically throwing stuff when I got there and explained that lexicographical comparison of the strings would not work. I was about to write my own class for it, but then I thought that since Bundler knew how to resolve deps we should see what it uses. The rest is history!

  • psadauskas 9 hours ago

    I use it quite a bit when I have to monkeypatch a gem to backport a fix while I wait for a release:

        raise "check if monkeypatch in #{__FILE__} is still needed" if Gem::Version.new(Rails.version) >= Gem::Version.new("8.0.0")
    
    This will blow up immediately when the gem gets upgraded, so we can see if we still need it, instead of it laying around in wait to cause a subtle bug in the future.
  • shevy-java 8 hours ago

    > I discovered this a few years ago

    Right. I think I found it on stackoverflow.

    The question is: why does the official documentation not mention this, along with guides?

    Answer: because documentation is something the ruby core team does not want to think about. It is using scary language after all: English. The bane of most japanese developers. Plus, it is well-documented in Japanese already ... :>

  • saghm 9 hours ago

    > They were practically throwing stuff when I got there and explained that lexicographical comparison of the strings would not work.

    Versions numbers can go to 10!?!

  • stefan_ 7 hours ago

    Aaand 10 years later you just learned to compare versions by equality instead of being impossibly clever.

c-hendricks 11 hours ago

title is actually "Ruby already solved my problem"

  • throwaway81523 11 hours ago

    Thanks, that helped. My unspoken question when I saw the title was "does that mean you now have two problems?".

parentheses 9 hours ago

I think this article is funny. Python's STL is way more useful and contains myriad useful things that Ruby lacks out of the box.

difflib is probably my favorite one to cite.

Go see for yourself: https://docs.python.org/3/library/index.html

The benefit there is that their quality, security, completeness and documentation are all great!

  • zahlman 5 hours ago

    "STL" is not an abbreviation for "standard library". It doesn't even correctly refer to the C++ standard library; that's a misnomer. There was only one STL, and it was third-party; saying "Python's STL" makes barely any more sense than saying "Python's Boost".

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_Template_Library

  • empiko 9 hours ago

    If I would get a cent every time I solved a difficult problem in a project by pulling out difflib and shocking the team with it, I would have two cents. It's not a lot, but it's amusing that it happened two times already.