I believe it does, thank you. If I understand you correctly, Oden is to the Go community a bit like what Scala is to the Java/JVM community.
On Sunday, June 12, 2016 at 3:17:15 PM UTC-7, Oskar Wickström wrote: > > Glad you like it! :) > > The latter suggestion fits the goals of Oden better. It is focused on > being the language you write your application in, while making it easy to > use stuff from Go. Using Oden code from Go is not directly supported, but > might be practically possible anyway. I hope that answers your question > well, otherwise I'll try another way. :) > > Den torsdag 26 maj 2016 kl. 00:47:03 UTC+2 skrev Tyler Compton: >> >> The language looks interested and I love the Oden mascot! >> >> I'm not sure if I understand the goal, though. Is this supposed to be a >> language used alongside Go code for parts of the application that are >> better or easier expressed using Oden (kind of like when using Lua in a C >> code base) , or is it supposed to be a language to write your entire >> project in instead of Go (that happens to leverage Go under the covers)? >> >> On Saturday, May 14, 2016 at 8:59:15 PM UTC-7, Oskar Wickström wrote: >>> >>> Hi! I just released Oden 0.3.0, an experimental functional programming >>> language for the Go ecosystem, which now features both parametric >>> polymorphism and experimental support for ad hoc polymorphism (basically >>> like Haskell type classes). For more info see >>> https://oden-lang.org/blog/news/2016/05/14/0.3.0-is-out.html. I'll try >>> to get more documentation up this week. >>> >>> Have a nice weekend! >> >> -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "golang-nuts" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.