Post APAxF6NhWlHxxIcLK4 by ignaloidas@not.acu.lt
 (DIR) More posts by ignaloidas@not.acu.lt
 (DIR) Post #APAnmCVglKZ6yiUuqu by cadey@pony.social
       2022-11-01T21:36:36Z
       
       2 likes, 1 repeats
       
       
       
 (DIR) Post #APAsGpo5ccmrMKy2PA by livho@tech.lgbt
       2022-11-01T22:33:42Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @cadey I have to disagree. How do you write embedded software without C?My advice: Start writing C! And learn how to not waste memory.
       
 (DIR) Post #APAsGqQNKHPbH4sc52 by cadey@pony.social
       2022-11-01T22:35:15Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @livho Rust can target embedded platforms.
       
 (DIR) Post #APAsGrRpWMAaRsZHzE by Seirdy@pleroma.envs.net
       2022-11-01T22:39:33.419326Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @cadey @livho For some of this, Ada might also be a good choice. It doesn't have the same memory guarantees but offers more progress on the standardization, portability, and compiler diversity front while lending itself to gradual verification.
       
 (DIR) Post #APAsGxheGSO7qg10TY by livho@tech.lgbt
       2022-11-01T22:45:43Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @cadey Technically it can. But it’s not widely supported (yet). I think Rust is a good C++ replacement but not a C replacement. It can hardly beat the beautiful simplicity of C.
       
 (DIR) Post #APAsGyEGJCTZTpH3JI by cadey@pony.social
       2022-11-01T22:47:58Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @livho one thing being good in C doesn't mean we should handicap the entire rest of the industry from forward progress
       
 (DIR) Post #APAxF5YIbsAjNsZICe by livho@tech.lgbt
       2022-11-01T22:51:09Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @cadey I wouldn’t write every high-level program in C, but when working close to hardware, C gives me exactly the control over the hardware I need.
       
 (DIR) Post #APAxF6NhWlHxxIcLK4 by ignaloidas@not.acu.lt
       2022-11-01T23:56:13.214Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @livho@tech.lgbt @cadey@pony.social C gives you exactly enough illusion of control over the hardware that you need and also gives you way too much control over things that you don't need.