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Bolt
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====
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Bolt is a new programming language for rapidly building complex applications.
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Bolt has an unique mix of features that allows you to write fully-fledged
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applications insanely fast.
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Bolt is a new programming language in the making for rapidly building complex applications.
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It Bolt makes writing web applications dead-simple, and will eventually also support mobile and desktop.
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- **Garbage collected** using state-of-the art garbage collectors where
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possible, so you don't have to worry about memory leaks.
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Bolt has an unique mix of features that allows you to write fully-fledged
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applications insanely fast, while at the same time guaranteeing that your programs
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do what they are supposed to do.
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- **Garbage collected**, freeing you from worrying about memory management.
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- **JSX support**, so you write your views in the syntax you're already
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familiar with.
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- **Advanced language feature**, such as _algebraic effects_, making things
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like React's `useState` primitive objects in the language.
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- **Lots of useful language features** such as match-expressions, tuples, macros, static type checking, automatic type inference, and much more to give you the best development experience.
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- **Cross-platform standard library**, allowing you to write your code for the
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web and the desktop at the same time.
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web platform and the native platform at the same time.
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```
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fn fac(n) {
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}
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}
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print(fac(5)) // 10
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println!("The faculty of {} is {}", 5, fac(5));
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```
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## FAQ
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### Why yet another programming language?
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Granted, there are _a lot_ of programming languages, but oddly enough I found myself
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in the situation where I was still not completely satisfied. For example, Rust is a fantastic programming language,
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but writing web applications in it feels a little counter-intuitive due to its manual memory management.
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On the other hand, functional programming languages like Haskell and Idris look like they come straight out of the future, but sometimes have unpredictable run-time performance and force you to do weird things when all you want to do is mutate a variable. Bolt aims to solve these two issues, and to be a gate into more complex compilers. Who knows what the successor will look like?
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More expressiveness, less boilerplate, and most of all more safety. Bolt is my first attempt at finding it.
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### Why should I choose Bolt over JavaScript?
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Bolt was made to make writing user-interfaces dead-simple, while also making
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## License
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Bolt itself is licensed under the GPL-3.0, because we put a lot of work in it
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and we want the open-source nature of Bolt to be preserved. However, code that
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Bolt itself is licensed under the GPL-3.0, because I put a lot of work in it
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and I want the open-source nature of Bolt to be preserved. However, code that
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is compiled using the Bolt compiler may be licensed under any license you want.
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This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
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