I have never heard of Crystal before. Can someone give a quick explanation of what this language is good for and why it is exists? There are already so many languages out there.
The easiest way to think about it that is kinda right, and what got me into is "It's like compiled Ruby and nearly as fast as C".
Crystal is a language with syntax modeled after Ruby, which is considered one of the most human friendly languages (it's way easier to understand than C and most others). Ruby and Crystal are "object oriented". Like if you wanted to know what I had for lunch using Crystal you'd ask me, an "object" last_meal = kool_newt.stomach_contents, as where in C, you'd cut me open and look.
Where Ruby is a dynamically typed (it figures out whether things are Strings or Arrays, etc on the fly as needed, handy but very slow) scripting language, Crystal is statically typed, so you have to be conscious of types while you code. And where with ruby you end up with a script, Crystal code is compiled into a binary.
Where Ruby is good for small/medium websites with a modest traffic, or for prototyping ideas in an easy language, or making smaller utilities, Crystal can handle massive traffic, and make fast production level apps and tools without the difficulty of C or Java.
I'm using Crystal and Kemal (Kemal is akin to Ruby's Sinatra) for web dev, and trying to make my own DNS utils (I want dnsip, not a fan of drill, dig, and other tools).
I've looked into Elixir a bit, I'd probably be into it or Rust if Crystal didn't exist, more so than Go. Something about languages that run in a VM turns me off tho, reminds me of Java too much I guess. I've never heard of Gleam, that makes two languages I've learned of due to Lemmy in like 3 weeks!
I wouldn't dismiss VM languages outright. I'm also not a fan of the Java VM but the two VMs are very much very different. Also Erlang (and it's VM) were built for telecommunication, and the problems they tried to solve 30 years ago with it are very similar to modern backend engineering problems.
Erlang is in large parts also what allowed WhatsApp to scale to it's userbase with only 30 engineers.
Anyone programming in crystal here? How is the LSP/editor story now? I've seen a couple of really nice projects in crystal - an OS on reddit, and kagi which I use daily now.
If they have a better LSP implementation and editor setup from what they used to have a year or so ago, it would be really nice.
Language Server Protocol. It's how programs (language servers) can talk to your editor (like vs code or nvim) and provide refractors and intellisense and what not.