
Am 23.04.2016 um 06:28 schrieb Dimitri DeFigueiredo:
I'm interested in webassembly's recent momentum
https://hacks.mozilla.org/2016/03/a-webassembly-milestone/
Is this a way we could get a foot in the web? I'm curious, just putting the thought out there.
Points to consider: ITfind commented that he'd expect browser support to happen in around 3-5 years. My own comment would be the question whether it's going to happen at all, or peter out. Then there's the question whether Webassembly will be Haskell-friendly. It might be a good idea for some Haskell compiler expertise to participate in the interest group to make it so. Also, the purpose of WebAssembly will be to integrate with the browser's DOM and with Javascript library. These interfaces are inherently stateful, so whether that can succeed will massively depend on good Haskell library support. In particular, it will need to appeal to web developers, most of which will come from a Javascript background; that's quite a cultural gap that the Haskell-side library will have to bridge. I think the interface libraries will have to be designed by somebody who is at home and in love with both environments. Finally, any interface libraries that will have to be downloaded from web pages should be small. Less than 100k. Page bloat is a real and serious problem. Haskell could actually take off if it turns out that Haskell-generated Webassembly is smaller than Webassembly generated from other languages. Given that Haskell code tends to have a higher abstraction level than code written in other languages, that's quite possible; however, the entire compiler needs to be configured towards small footprint to achieve that goal, expect work required towards that end. Just tinkering with Webassembly won't make Haskell get a foot in the web, but it may provide valuable insights into how Haskell might interface with the Next Big Thing of That Kind, whatever that will be, so tinkering would be a project in its own right. If the goal is to get a foot in the web, that's going to require a lot of manpower, and the Haskell compiler crowd will have to contribute at least advice and problem analysis. Like you I'd like to see that happen but can't make much happen myself; the best I can do is to look how the journey might be, and hope somebody who can do actual work on that is will pick up what's useful about my thoughts.