this post was submitted on 19 Jul 2024
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Nix being an expression based functional language, it doesn't really make sense to have something like
let x=y;
since this looks to most people like a statement (i.e. a line of code that gets executed as part of a sequence). This doesn't exist in nix—instead you have expressions that get lazily evaluated, possibly out of order compared to what you'd expect.let x=y in
makes it more clear that the variable binding you're doing is only in scope for the current expression, which reads something like "let x refer to y in x + 3"The function definition syntax is unusual but definitely not unintuitive imo. It captures the simplicity of the function semantics of nix—a function is just a mapping/transformation from one value (or set of values) to another. I don't think it's too much overhead to learn that they use
:
to mean this instead of=>
In terms of why they picked this syntax, it follows the traditions of other functional languages such as the ML family, Haskell etc.
I know of several languages that just have
let x=y; <expr>
as an expression. It works fine, it's just more obvious syntax.The fact that it looks like a statement is kind of the point.
OCaml at least supports both forms. They didn't have to pick the weird one.