Sponsors


Sentry use code “devchat” for $100 credit




Datadog




React Native Radio


Panel


David Kimura




Andrew Mason


With Special Guest: Paul Tarjan

Episode Summary

Paul Tarjan works for Stripe specializing in developer productivity. In the past, he has owned his own company and worked for Facebook. In today’s episode, the panel is talking about Sorbet, a gradual type checker for Ruby that Paul built. Paul talks about how Sorbet fits in the Ruby community and how it works. The two parts of Sorbet are the runtime type check and the static typecheck. Paul talks about how introducing Sorbet at Stripe has changed the way they approach coding. He talks about some of the performance impacts of adding Sorbet, how it differs from other type checkers, and how it was received in the Ruby community. Paul delves into how developers are notified if Sorbet fails a type check while checking a class. The panel discusses ways to convince reluctant team members that introducing a type checker like Sorbet will improve their code, and Paul talks about his experience implementing it at Stripe. He talks about what he sees for the future of Sorbet. The show finishes with the panel discussing similar projects in other languages and their opinions on React in light of Paul’s former employment with Facebook. 

 

Links


Stripe




Sorbet




Sorbet Rails




Sorbet Static




Ocra




mypy




TypeScript




Sorbet.run 




Flow




React


Follow DevChat on Facebook and Twitter

Picks

Andrew Mason:


Stimulus Reflex


David Kimura:


Pingverse


Paul Tarjan:


Follow Paul https://paultarjan.com/




Sorbet


Special Guest: Paul Tarjan.

Sponsors


Sentry use code “devchat” for $100 credit




Datadog




React Native Radio


Panel


David Kimura




Andrew Mason


With Special Guest: Paul Tarjan

Episode Summary

Paul Tarjan works for Stripe specializing in developer productivity. In the past, he has owned his own company and worked for Facebook. In today’s episode, the panel is talking about Sorbet, a gradual type checker for Ruby that Paul built. Paul talks about how Sorbet fits in the Ruby community and how it works. The two parts of Sorbet are the runtime type check and the static typecheck. Paul talks about how introducing Sorbet at Stripe has changed the way they approach coding. He talks about some of the performance impacts of adding Sorbet, how it differs from other type checkers, and how it was received in the Ruby community. Paul delves into how developers are notified if Sorbet fails a type check while checking a class. The panel discusses ways to convince reluctant team members that introducing a type checker like Sorbet will improve their code, and Paul talks about his experience implementing it at Stripe. He talks about what he sees for the future of Sorbet. The show finishes with the panel discussing similar projects in other languages and their opinions on React in light of Paul’s former employment with Facebook. 

 

Links


Stripe




Sorbet




Sorbet Rails




Sorbet Static




Ocra




mypy




TypeScript




Sorbet.run 




Flow




React


Follow DevChat on Facebook and Twitter

Picks

Andrew Mason:


Stimulus Reflex


David Kimura:


Pingverse


Paul Tarjan:


Follow Paul https://paultarjan.com/




Sorbet



Special Guest: Paul Tarjan.

Twitter Mentions