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283 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
283 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
---
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language: Nim
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filename: learnNim.nim
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contributors:
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- ["Jason J. Ayala P.", "http://JasonAyala.com"]
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- ["Dennis Felsing", "https://dennis.felsing.org"]
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---
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Nim (formerly Nimrod) is a statically typed, imperative programming language
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that gives the programmer power without compromises on runtime efficiency.
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Nim is efficient, expressive, and elegant.
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```nim
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# Single-line comments start with a #
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#[
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This is a multiline comment.
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In Nim, multiline comments can be nested, beginning with #[
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... and ending with ]#
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]#
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discard """
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This can also work as a multiline comment.
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Or for unparsable, broken code
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"""
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var # Declare (and assign) variables,
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letter: char = 'n' # with or without type annotations
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lang = "N" & "im"
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nLength: int = len(lang)
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boat: float
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truth: bool = false
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let # Use let to declare and bind variables *once*.
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legs = 400 # legs is immutable.
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arms = 2_000 # _ are ignored and are useful for long numbers.
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aboutPi = 3.15
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const # Constants are computed at compile time. This provides
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debug = true # performance and is useful in compile time expressions.
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compileBadCode = false
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when compileBadCode: # `when` is a compile time `if`
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legs = legs + 1 # This error will never be compiled.
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const input = readline(stdin) # Const values must be known at compile time.
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discard 1 > 2 # Note: The compiler will complain if the result of an expression
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# is unused. `discard` bypasses this.
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#
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# Data Structures
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#
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# Tuples
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var
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child: tuple[name: string, age: int] # Tuples have *both* field names
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today: tuple[sun: string, temp: float] # *and* order.
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child = (name: "Rudiger", age: 2) # Assign all at once with literal ()
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today.sun = "Overcast" # or individual fields.
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today.temp = 70.1
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# Sequences
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var
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drinks: seq[string]
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drinks = @["Water", "Juice", "Chocolate"] # @[V1,..,Vn] is the sequence literal
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drinks.add("Milk")
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if "Milk" in drinks:
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echo "We have Milk and ", drinks.len - 1, " other drinks"
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let myDrink = drinks[2]
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#
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# Defining Types
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#
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# Defining your own types puts the compiler to work for you. It's what makes
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# static typing powerful and useful.
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type
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Name = string # A type alias gives you a new type that is interchangeable
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Age = int # with the old type but is more descriptive.
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Person = tuple[name: Name, age: Age] # Define data structures too.
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AnotherSyntax = tuple
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fieldOne: string
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secondField: int
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var
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john: Person = (name: "John B.", age: 17)
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newage: int = 18 # It would be better to use Age than int
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john.age = newage # But still works because int and Age are synonyms
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type
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Cash = distinct int # `distinct` makes a new type incompatible with its
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Desc = distinct string # base type.
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var
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money: Cash = 100.Cash # `.Cash` converts the int to our type
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description: Desc = "Interesting".Desc
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when compileBadCode:
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john.age = money # Error! age is of type int and money is Cash
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john.name = description # Compiler says: "No way!"
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#
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# More Types and Data Structures
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#
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# Enumerations allow a type to have one of a limited number of values
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type
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Color = enum cRed, cBlue, cGreen
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Direction = enum # Alternative formatting
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dNorth
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dWest
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dEast
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dSouth
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var
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orient = dNorth # `orient` is of type Direction, with the value `dNorth`
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pixel = cGreen # `pixel` is of type Color, with the value `cGreen`
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discard dNorth > dEast # Enums are usually an "ordinal" type
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# Subranges specify a limited valid range
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type
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DieFaces = range[1..20] # Only an int from 1 to 20 is a valid value
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var
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my_roll: DieFaces = 13
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when compileBadCode:
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my_roll = 23 # Error!
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# Arrays
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type
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RollCounter = array[DieFaces, int] # Arrays are fixed length and
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DirNames = array[Direction, string] # indexed by any ordinal type.
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Truths = array[42..44, bool]
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var
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counter: RollCounter
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directions: DirNames
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possible: Truths
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possible = [false, false, false] # Literal arrays are created with [V1,..,Vn]
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possible[42] = true
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directions[dNorth] = "Ahh. The Great White North!"
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directions[dWest] = "No, don't go there."
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my_roll = 13
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counter[my_roll] += 1
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counter[my_roll] += 1
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var anotherArray = ["Default index", "starts at", "0"]
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# More data structures are available, including tables, sets, lists, queues,
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# and crit bit trees.
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# http://nim-lang.org/docs/lib.html#collections-and-algorithms
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#
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# IO and Control Flow
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#
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# `case`, `readLine()`
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echo "Read any good books lately?"
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case readLine(stdin)
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of "no", "No":
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echo "Go to your local library."
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of "yes", "Yes":
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echo "Carry on, then."
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else:
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echo "That's great; I assume."
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# `while`, `if`, `continue`, `break`
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import strutils as str # http://nim-lang.org/docs/strutils.html
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echo "I'm thinking of a number between 41 and 43. Guess which!"
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let number: int = 42
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var
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raw_guess: string
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guess: int # Variables in Nim are always initialized with a zero value
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while guess != number:
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raw_guess = readLine(stdin)
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if raw_guess == "": continue # Skip this iteration
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guess = str.parseInt(raw_guess)
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if guess == 1001:
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echo("AAAAAAGGG!")
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break
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elif guess > number:
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echo("Nope. Too high.")
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elif guess < number:
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echo(guess, " is too low")
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else:
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echo("Yeeeeeehaw!")
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#
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# Iteration
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#
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for i, elem in ["Yes", "No", "Maybe so"]: # Or just `for elem in`
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echo(elem, " is at index: ", i)
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for k, v in items(@[(person: "You", power: 100), (person: "Me", power: 9000)]):
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echo v
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let myString = """
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an <example>
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`string` to
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play with
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""" # Multiline raw string
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for line in splitLines(myString):
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echo(line)
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for i, c in myString: # Index and letter. Or `for j in` for just letter
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if i mod 2 == 0: continue # Compact `if` form
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elif c == 'X': break
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else: echo(c)
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#
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# Procedures
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#
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type Answer = enum aYes, aNo
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proc ask(question: string): Answer =
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echo(question, " (y/n)")
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while true:
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case readLine(stdin)
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of "y", "Y", "yes", "Yes":
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return Answer.aYes # Enums can be qualified
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of "n", "N", "no", "No":
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return Answer.aNo
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else: echo("Please be clear: yes or no")
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proc addSugar(amount: int = 2) = # Default amount is 2, returns nothing
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assert(amount > 0 and amount < 9000, "Crazy Sugar")
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for a in 1..amount:
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echo(a, " sugar...")
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case ask("Would you like sugar in your tea?")
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of aYes:
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addSugar(3)
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of aNo:
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echo "Oh do take a little!"
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addSugar()
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# No need for an `else` here. Only `yes` and `no` are possible.
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#
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# FFI
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#
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# Because Nim compiles to C, FFI is easy:
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proc strcmp(a, b: cstring): cint {.importc: "strcmp", nodecl.}
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let cmp = strcmp("C?", "Easy!")
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```
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Additionally, Nim separates itself from its peers with metaprogramming,
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performance, and compile-time features.
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## Further Reading
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* [Home Page](http://nim-lang.org)
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* [Download](http://nim-lang.org/download.html)
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* [Community](http://nim-lang.org/community.html)
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* [FAQ](http://nim-lang.org/question.html)
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* [Documentation](http://nim-lang.org/documentation.html)
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* [Manual](http://nim-lang.org/docs/manual.html)
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* [Standard Library](http://nim-lang.org/docs/lib.html)
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* [Rosetta Code](http://rosettacode.org/wiki/Category:Nim)
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