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shmerlyesterday at 11:40 PM4 repliesview on HN

OK, then I got some wrong info. If it's stuck at it deliberately, then it's worse. May be someone should fork it and bring it up to date with recent Lua versions. Why is this split needed?


Replies

upofadownyesterday at 11:59 PM

My understanding is that there was a language fork after 5.1. One thing was a complete reworking of how math works. It used to be just floating point for everything but the new idea was to make it like Python 3. So most operations are float/integer with some weird exceptions.

As with any language fork there will be some who stay and others who switch to the new thing. Often a fork will drive people away from a particular language as in my case.

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ux266478today at 3:46 AM

The language is different. The changes to environments in particular are a non-starter. Sandboxing is incredibly clunky in 5.2+, and we lost a lot of metaprogramming power and dynamic behavior.

ori_btoday at 2:32 AM

> May be someone should fork it and bring it up to date with recent Lua versions. Why is this split needed?

Good news, you're someone. If you care, you're welcome to go for it.

krapptoday at 10:16 AM

I strenuously disagree. Not every language needs to chase trends and pile on unnecessary complexity because developers want the latest shiny language toys to play with. It's good to have a simple, stable language that works and that you can depend on to remain sane for the forseeable future.

C is a language like that but I fear the feature creep is coming (auto? AUTO??.) JS is a lost cause.