Thanks, I'll check it out the next time I wait for the scala compiler to complete it's compilation ;) very soon, I heard from one of my best friends (the internet ;) that multicore programming is one of the cons of OCaml vs Haskell, which is a thing to take in the list of consideration. I mean the way in which is supports parallelism.
Programming languages enthusiast. Author of Learn Type Driven Development: https://www.packtpub.com/application-development/learn-type-driven-development
Multicore is not a problem unless you're doing 'embarassingly parallelisable' computations like counting, summing, etc. :-) Even then OCaml libraries like Async Parallel offer multicore options.
For pretty much everything else, OCaml's single-threaded performance outstrips pretty much everything short of C/C++.
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Thanks, I'll check it out the next time I wait for the scala compiler to complete it's compilation ;) very soon, I heard from one of my best friends (the internet ;) that multicore programming is one of the cons of OCaml vs Haskell, which is a thing to take in the list of consideration. I mean the way in which is supports parallelism.
Multicore is not a problem unless you're doing 'embarassingly parallelisable' computations like counting, summing, etc. :-) Even then OCaml libraries like Async Parallel offer multicore options.
For pretty much everything else, OCaml's single-threaded performance outstrips pretty much everything short of C/C++.