2/19/2026 at 1:51:18 PM
I find it quite interesting how particular languages seem to disproportionally attract specific kinds of projects.From a first glance, this is the second somewhat opinionated, compact, minimal-dependency interpreter/shell/library bundle despite the Lua(JIT) ecosystem being tiny. The other example I have in mind for this would've been luapower, which sadly became somewhat inactive.
I really like the simplicity of the language and the speed and compactness of its implementation. The JIT is also the real deal, with millisecond cold start execution delays unlike Julia, which masquerades as a JIT/interpreted language while featuring dog slow (by comparison) LLVM ("pre-")compilation under the hood (core language, type system, package management and interoperability concepts are admittedly nice in Julia though).
by myrmidon
2/19/2026 at 2:18:00 PM
Also loosely related: Redbean is a webserver in a single-file that runs natively on six OSes for both AMD64 and ARM64by rainingmonkey
2/19/2026 at 2:14:29 PM
This is what culture is right? Different sorts of people are attracted to different sorts of things and so the culture that builds around those things is somewhat self reinforcing. Lua's culture mirrors its core and attracts people who like simple extensible solutions to problems. This looks like a pretty compelling simple extensible tool. Hopefully the development continues and doesn't drop off like Luapower. I do wish it had first class fennel support but that's really easy to add.by trescenzi
2/19/2026 at 2:46:16 PM
Lua is designed for the use case of being embedded.> "Lua: an extensible embedded language"
by tiffanyh