There’s no obvious way to switch to normal (aka “light”) mode. Dark mode is very difficult for some people (me included) to read.
If you must default to dark mode that’s your choice but I’d love to see a light mode toggle somewhere prominent.
joluxtoday at 7:32 PM
Love the new site!
Minor typo in the Erlang card:
“Elixir also excels at IoT, distributed systems, and everything the Erlang is renowned for”
should probably be “everything the Erlang VM is known for” or “everything Erlang is known for.”
999900000999today at 5:32 PM
Elixir is such an elegant language.
I'm hoping to find a reason to use it soon.
SoftTalkertoday at 8:57 PM
I don't really have large monitors by today's standards, and the site looks nice enough but fully half of what I'm looking at is blank space. I don't remember what the old site looked like so don't know if that's really a change.
sphtoday at 5:21 PM
No mention of AI and LLM in the front page. Life is good.
grahactoday at 4:10 PM
This is great! Now waiting for the forum UI update too! :)
Hoping Elixir continues to thrive. It is such a great language (and such a great language for AI coding too!)
alberthtoday at 4:13 PM
Elixir is great.
OT: I wish more funding & development effort went into BEAM itself on making it more performant.
Note: I’m not talking concurrency. I’m talking pure raw performance.
Seems like it’s been a one person show for over a decade on making it faster.
allanmacgregortoday at 3:57 PM
Looks pretty good, I like that they are highlighting the potential uses for elixir.
tostitoday at 7:07 PM
I followed the links to docs and getting started, but it says page not found.
To me, it seems one of the killer use cases for Elixir (/Erlang) is its distributed cluster capability. Does anyone have experience with that or case reports to share? I've used Elixir quite a bit professionally, but mostly as just a "nicer Rails" with horizontally scalable but otherwise independent Phoenix apps in your traditional Kubernetes setup, which seems to me to kind of missing out on its main purpose.
aejmtoday at 7:35 PM
I think this version is an improvement over the old one! In particular how it highlights the packages in the ecosystem better.
jeanlucastoday at 4:15 PM
Nice! The showcase of companies is really nice
swingboytoday at 6:34 PM
On the first syntax example: there’s something funny to me about using three pipe operator and four different functions to turn “hello world” into “Hello World”.
asa400today at 5:21 PM
Looks great! There are some style quirks with cutoff elements in Firefox 152.0.6: https://imgur.com/a/OtnESi7
binaryturtletoday at 5:18 PM
Site doesn't work for me (older Firefox). Looks like there's no CSS and some Javascript error (probably makes it bail out loading the CSS?)
I appreciate Elixir but the problem is the job market/talent pool is tiny compared to other existing languages.
If you buy into the Elixir stack then you now have constraint you could've avoided entirely by avoiding it.
Also for devs there seems to be no premium offered for this talent pool scarcity. With LLMs I think language-specialists are redundant in a large scheme of things. ex) at one of my current remote jobs, I shipped an entire telecom infrastructure with barely knowing Elixir and we brought on contractors to audit the code and they found no issues.
Starlevel004today at 5:12 PM
Why does it have like 0.1s animations?
phplovesongtoday at 5:24 PM
I guess elixir is a nice lang for the niche of erlang. But its dynamic (the "type system" is really meh at best) its not suited for real world use.
If i go full dynamic, why not use pure erlang instead?
ModernMechtoday at 4:39 PM
Ugh, it looks like all the other LLM generated language webpages. It's formulaic at this point. I'd hoped a language like Elixir would be able to hire some people to do it.
shevy-javatoday at 8:34 PM
Looks nice. But it would be more important
to clean up elixir itself. So many things
are unnecessary syntax-wise. At the least
elixir made working with erlang easier, so
they solved that part.
arikrahmantoday at 4:49 PM
I prefer https://jank-lang.org/ new re-design, and the approach of a more step-wise refinement.