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An Early History of Pony (ponylang.org)
13 points by spooneybarger on May 6, 2017 | hide | past | favorite | 8 comments


I've never heard of Pony, there is a whole lot of reading without an example code. I expected to see examples on "New to Pony", "Learning Pony" tutorial.


Tutorial contains a nice overview of language features and usage[1]

[1] https://tutorial.ponylang.org/


I think what he's saying is it's hard to get to the code. If you open this on mobile for example, there is a whole lot of scrolling to do before you eventually realize there is an arrow at the very bottom, which will eventually lead into a three-line code sample.


> Unfortunately, a start-up based on a programming language is a notoriously bad idea. I’m not saying it’s impossible - but there isn’t a great track record for them

Any examples of successful startups based on a new programming language? Lightbend (previously Typesafe) worked on Scala, but the language existed before the company.


Forth Inc[0] might qualify. The company was founded by Chuck Moore and Elizabeth Rather in 1971. Chuck invented Forth and Elizabeth was the second person to learn it.

[0] https://www.forth.com/software-development-company/


If you leave out _new_, as the OP did, there's at least one example: Microsoft.


That's funny. Microsoft took the main guy from Pony.

They're really invested in languages like C# and F#.

I guess you gotta be a big established company to afford to maintain programming language. Google have Go. Ericsson got Erlang.


I like that seeing my name being mentioned




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