5 comments

  • Waterluvian 5 hours ago
    Any sense how, if at all, C++ Immer and JS Immer relate as projects? They’re basically meant to be the same thing but I haven’t found either acknowledging the other.
    • acemarke 4 hours ago
      Completely unrelated.

      - Immer (C++) appears to be roughly equivalent to Immutable.js ( https://immutable-js.com/ ): a set of specialized data structures

      - Immer (JS), on the other hand, uses JS Proxies to wrap plain values, traps attempted mutations, and then replays them to return a safely immutable updated final result

      As far as I know, Michel Weststrate came up with the name independently (although I can't 100% confirm that).

      (source: I didn't create Immer (JS), but I started using it in Redux Toolkit in 2018, am quoted in the docs about how much I love it, spent the last couple months doing performance optimization work that got shipped in Immer 11.x, and just put up some more bugfix PRs today. I'm a secondary maintainer at this point.)

    • eru 4 hours ago
      'Immer' is just German for 'always' or 'eternal'. So giving that name to your library of persistent and immutable data structures is a fairly natural thing to do, without them having anything more in common than that.

      (Of course, they might have more in common, I don't know.)

  • naruhodo 5 hours ago
    For the curious, yes they provide a garbage-collected heap [1] as well as reference counting.

    [1] https://sinusoid.es/immer/memory.html#classimmer_1_1gc__heap

  • gnabgib 6 days ago
    Popular in:

    2019 (102 points, 56 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20947222

    2016 (144 points, 46 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13049843

  • nurettin 1 hour ago
    Anyone else religiously went through 490 packages in cppget to make sure they aren't missing out?
  • asa 5 hours ago
    Good stuff. Very good stuff.