Python has wonderful set of libraries so it is probably going to stay with us for a while. However, I suspect major takeover by Typescript (despite I like Python more).
Interesting -- I still think that Python is an easier onramp than TypeScript for new developers. But given the popularity and depth of JavaScript, and the clear advantages (and popularity) of TypeScript in serious development, that's not a bad prediction.
One thing that Python has that virtually no (well okay groovy and nim do too) other programming language has is whitespace for blocks rather than visible braces (or even BEGIN/END ala Wirthian languages). That's something much like line numbers in classic BASIC that introduces a roadblock when learners move on from it.
I don't know if it's that hard for people to go from Python (where whitespace is significant) to languages that use {} and the like. But hey, people only hire me when they want people to learn Python, not when they're moving away from it. :-)
To what extent do you see Python drifting toward stronger typing? I ask because after 10 years without touching a single line of Python, I recently worked on a Python code base and I was very positively surprised by the static typing that's available in the language now. Not even necessary to to reach for additional tooling like JS and TS.
What tooling are you thinking of that’s part of the language? I don’t think CPython ships with a type checker, does it? People typically use mypy or pyright and neither or these are part of the language.
Drifting? I think it's there. basedpyright is awesome and super fast. Our latest services are all CI gated by type checking. Early in my career you'd hit so many dumb errors running your code - NoneType, attribute, value, and type errors. I'd say that's been cut over 95%.
I can see Rust (and to some degree, Go) as the modern outputs from AI. My point about Python being Pinyin is that both of these languages have a relatively steep learning curve for someone without programming experience, and that it might be worth learning Python before doing agentic coding in Rust, much as children in China learn Latin characters before they learn characters.
The problem with Rust is that, AI aside, the learning curve is steep. Even senior engineers need to wrap their head around Rust for several weeks.
You can pick up Go or Java in an afternoon. It’s fast, it mostly makes sense. Unless you do very specific low level things I don’t particularly see Rust becoming the de facto norm for the vast amount of enterprise code
It's an interesting point but I fear Go's FFI is going to kneecap its ability to be widely adopted unless that story improves significantly. It's a lovely language if your interop with other languages is minimal.
I 100% agree about Go. It is definitely going to claim its share, even without AI being particularly good at it, because of its speed, native concurrency, and strong typing. It is much less flexible than Python and clearly loses in some areas — for example, Python’s ML and parsing libraries are far superior. However, for API-focused projects, like a typical Flask or FastAPI app, Go seems more powerful.
Interesting. Can you please elaborate more? Is it due to the combination of popular foundation (js) and the addition of strong typing? The runtime environment differences? The ease of integration with other languages / tools?
* Most applications run on the web nowadays. With TypeScript, you can write both the front end and the back end.
* TypeScript shares many syntactic-sugar ideas with Python, but it is also statically typed. Whether that is good or bad is a hot topic, but it gives you a lot of confidence through compile-time checks.
* Running Node for system tasks is as easy as running the Python interpreter. However, Python is still slightly ahead there.
I feel like the moment for typescript taking over has come and gone. It also became way more complicated than necessary and that limits its appeal compared to python (not to say python doesn’t have problems of its own)
I’m a JS/TS dev (and fan) I don’t think either is a replacement for Python. They are not standalone languages but require some runtime to interact with the world (DOM or Node.js etc) which have limited capabilities for interacting with the system - their focus is network services. It’s not that inaccurate to say that JS is just API for a C++ app. :)
Now if .NET was still not so embedded in the Windows ecosystem that would be very interesting to me to jump from TS. As it is I am learning Go instead.
Sure but that runtime is much more general purpose - JS runtimes are focused on network apps. For example you can write an app like Calibre in Python and QT and it is much lighter than writing something with JS and Electron.
It’s not the async loop - it’s interfacing with the system. JS is designed to run in a sandbox and the only way out in say Node.js is to write C++ addons.
For example you don’t get to see TCP headers with Node out of the box and you can’t craft packets, whereas you can in Python.
.NET has had Linux support since 2016 or so. The only major part of .NET that is still stuck in Windows is official UI frameworks from MS, though there are third party frameworks like Avalonia that support Linux.
I am well aware it supports Linux but the vast majority of work still involves being in Windows-only shops which is a circle of hell I am keen to tread only when I absolutely have to. :)
This was why I was excited by Bun until recent events. A typescript runtime with a rich standard library, and fast. It looked like it would be a great sweet spot for many use cases.
It’s funny because I consider myself a Python veteran - about a decade or so of Python, and I had exactly the same thought. 99% of my code now is Java. It’s much less pleasant but the “enterprise nobs” just work. Static types, fast with Graal, awesome threading, and the quality of tooling are great - those are all areas that Python severely lacks in and has no interest expanding into, because it is a “fast prototype language”.
That fast prototyping can now be done in annoying but stable languages like Java or Go or Rust (or NET or Swift). So that cuts a massive leg from Python. Who will bother to maintain the ecosystem if a lot of senior folks are leaving in doves? No idea honestly
> Why ask AI to write its output in a dynamic language with relatively slow execution (i.e., Python)?
So that it's easy for humans to review it. Same reason as ever. Obviously Python isn't always the correct choice, but the overlap with cases where vibe coding is the correct choice is pretty high.
> Many people don’t realize this, but children in China first learn Latin characters, which they use to spell out Chinese phonetically, using a system called “pinyin.” They then use their knowledge of Latin characters to learn Chinese characters, whose pronunciation isn’t obvious from the characters themselves.
Code isn’t just execution, code is also abstraction. You need to be able to understand requirement => unit of work.
Unless you’re an uber geek this mostly isn’t the case and reading and retaining any amount of assembly will be practically impossible.
In a wishful world you could simply have a bunch of markdown specifications that are executed as machine code. But specifications are by design usually ambiguous, and so you need to build some level of abstraction to be able to accommodate and still understand that. That’s what code does, or should do
More than one reply to my original comment is along the lines of "but humans cannot read/understand machine code effectively". Perhaps instead of starting my comment with "If we're not writing code by hand anymore anyway", I should have said "writing or reading", but it was implied.
It's not portable and in today's world, you have x86 and ARM to contend with. My argument is that should make Java the default language for LLM output.
If you don't know what is Pinyin I googled it for you (I didn't know what it is):
Pinyin is a system for writing Mandarin Chinese sounds using the Latin alphabet. Pinyin is commonly used for learning Chinese pronunciation and for typing Chinese characters.
> It might seem weird for us to teach beginners Python, knowing that they’ll then have agents output other, faster languages. I see an analogy here with Chinese: Many people don’t realize this, but children in China first learn Latin characters, which they use to spell out Chinese phonetically, using a system called “pinyin.” They then use their knowledge of Latin characters to learn Chinese characters, whose pronunciation isn’t obvious from the characters themselves.
Pinyin is widely used, but pinyin’s primacy is oversold. Chinese texts start with teaching Chinese characters - many are recognizable to children from daily exposure to begin with, so they don’t need the pinyin. Pinyin only comes in when the character is genuinely unknown.
I've been taking Chinese lessons for a number of years, and my teacher described her son as learning characters via pinyin. But it's quite possible (even likely) that the common ones don't require pinyin, and/or that I misunderstood how it's used. Nevertheless, even if I pushed the analogy a bit, I still think this might happen as a bridge between learning to code and agentic coding.
The post focuses on Python, but I think it touches on an interesting question before skipping past it: ideally, what language would be best for our AIs to be programming in? The article says Rust. But can we do better? Rust has strong typing and memory guarantees which I think are important, but it’s also slower to compile. If we’re going to be doing agentic programming, where the agent is operating in a tight loop, iterating on the code, then it seems like we’d want something that can be faster to run after creating new code. Effectively, we’d want the agentic equivalent of a Lisp REPL, but optimized for the agent, or at least a language that compiles quickly, as it is run. This is one of the roles that Python plays today. Perhaps there is also a slow, sophisticated compiler that digests the same syntax and spits out the fastest , most secure code possible once the agent has iterated its way to the final answer.
A very interesting point. Coding with AI definitely requires tight, fast loops. I don't have much experience with Rust, but I had heard that the compiler is slow (because it's doing so much thinking and checking in advance).
I'm OK with Lisp output, but maybe that just shows how old I am. :-)
I wonder if it's possible (or wise) to have two different compilers for a language -- one that's optimized for such tight loops, and another that does thorough checking, etc. You know, kind of like -O, but at a much deeper level.
I mean if we're getting really serious about ai-first development, we might be able to get away with a ton of micro services written with clear, simple apis to communicate all in a giant mono-repo managed by an army of agents. That way the full surface any one agent has to touch is small, compile time of each individual service is very fast, and services can be hand-written if super critical.
Anyway, I've played around with the idea a bit so far, and it seems that current agents/harnesses use way more tokens with that architecture.
It seems like the obvious point of tension is that you probably want AI to be constrained to/by some rigor. Rust is good because it enforces some safety measures, but I'm more interested yet in the work to have AI work with lean4 or the like to prove its code is up to spec. But that proof checking is probably in direct conflict with fast compilation.
noon-raccoon | 8 hours ago
[OP] reuven | 6 hours ago
jhbadger | 5 hours ago
[OP] reuven | 5 hours ago
TheOtherHobbes | 5 hours ago
Python is a general development language that can be used to build servers and web pages, but does a lot more besides.
They're not really comparable.
Having said that - I wouldn't be surprised if Python drifts towards stronger typing, although it will probably remain optional.
samat | 5 hours ago
SwiftyBug | 4 hours ago
kccqzy | 4 hours ago
SwiftyBug | 4 hours ago
kccqzy | 51 minutes ago
kortex | 4 hours ago
noon-raccoon | 4 hours ago
wongarsu | 6 hours ago
Go might have the advantage because it's easier to read outside the IDE
[OP] reuven | 5 hours ago
usernametaken29 | 4 hours ago
dist-epoch | 5 hours ago
Rust has a huge advantage here, in fact many popular Python libraries use Rust underneath.
fpauser | 4 hours ago
dist-epoch | 3 hours ago
jorvi | 5 hours ago
But then you have the major downside of 'writing' poor code.
PxldLtd | 5 hours ago
noon-raccoon | 4 hours ago
fpauser | 4 hours ago
prinny_ | 5 hours ago
herrkanin | 5 hours ago
noon-raccoon | 5 hours ago
* Most applications run on the web nowadays. With TypeScript, you can write both the front end and the back end. * TypeScript shares many syntactic-sugar ideas with Python, but it is also statically typed. Whether that is good or bad is a hot topic, but it gives you a lot of confidence through compile-time checks. * Running Node for system tasks is as easy as running the Python interpreter. However, Python is still slightly ahead there.
dwroberts | 5 hours ago
gbuk2013 | 4 hours ago
Now if .NET was still not so embedded in the Windows ecosystem that would be very interesting to me to jump from TS. As it is I am learning Go instead.
b40d-48b2-979e | 4 hours ago
gbuk2013 | 4 hours ago
Python is easier to interface with C/C++ libs.
b40d-48b2-979e | 4 hours ago
gbuk2013 | 3 hours ago
For example you don’t get to see TCP headers with Node out of the box and you can’t craft packets, whereas you can in Python.
JCTheDenthog | 4 hours ago
gbuk2013 | 4 hours ago
gorjusborg | 3 hours ago
This was why I was excited by Bun until recent events. A typescript runtime with a rich standard library, and fast. It looked like it would be a great sweet spot for many use cases.
usernametaken29 | 5 hours ago
Hendrikto | 4 hours ago
I do not think subpar means what you think. Or maybe you rewrote the sentence and forgot to change that word? Anyway, this does not make sense.
usernametaken29 | 4 hours ago
DonsDiscountGas | 4 hours ago
So that it's easy for humans to review it. Same reason as ever. Obviously Python isn't always the correct choice, but the overlap with cases where vibe coding is the correct choice is pretty high.
Also wtf is Pinyin?
dkdbejwi383 | 4 hours ago
From the article:
> Many people don’t realize this, but children in China first learn Latin characters, which they use to spell out Chinese phonetically, using a system called “pinyin.” They then use their knowledge of Latin characters to learn Chinese characters, whose pronunciation isn’t obvious from the characters themselves.
kleiba2 | 4 hours ago
usernametaken29 | 4 hours ago
ftmootnomoat | 4 hours ago
1PlayerOne | 4 hours ago
xigoi | 4 hours ago
kleiba2 | 2 hours ago
More than one reply to my original comment is along the lines of "but humans cannot read/understand machine code effectively". Perhaps instead of starting my comment with "If we're not writing code by hand anymore anyway", I should have said "writing or reading", but it was implied.
fragmede | 4 hours ago
JCTheDenthog | 4 hours ago
noon-raccoon | 4 hours ago
Pinyin is a system for writing Mandarin Chinese sounds using the Latin alphabet. Pinyin is commonly used for learning Chinese pronunciation and for typing Chinese characters.
crazylogger | 4 hours ago
The article did explain, albeit near the end.
faitswulff | 4 hours ago
nneonneo | 4 hours ago
[OP] reuven | 4 hours ago
sthix | 4 hours ago
superze | 4 hours ago
spjt | 4 hours ago
drob518 | 4 hours ago
[OP] reuven | 3 hours ago
I'm OK with Lisp output, but maybe that just shows how old I am. :-)
I wonder if it's possible (or wise) to have two different compilers for a language -- one that's optimized for such tight loops, and another that does thorough checking, etc. You know, kind of like -O, but at a much deeper level.
arw0n | 2 hours ago
Anyway, I've played around with the idea a bit so far, and it seems that current agents/harnesses use way more tokens with that architecture.
Garlef | 2 hours ago
I think "batteries included" is not a good thing to have in the future.
We'll want to be very explicit about what AI generated code can and can not do.
And so some form of effects based scripting language seems like a plausible choice: A language where by default "all batteries are removed".
yjftsjthsd-h | 12 minutes ago