Event JSON
{
"id": "760f3e374f54abe1914d78e1ee4346459a8a7f23111b307b6a2d3a9f156afc8a",
"pubkey": "14ea47e7d089f910d1a7fea3f11416fe15c4d7e8014839df2cf2a4dba95a1a47",
"created_at": 1688659086,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"p",
"62214198b6d9e72600f9a261eeab0a2085b671c99040e418df2013ab6d396c1e",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"p",
"19132ebf4163a2399191bc90c23f33d1fe4945cbe9c807b0d196b172a2701961",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"e",
"355abcc31071b27b0775ec1702b7135f27a47d153d03b33f517b7097fa5fc723",
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"reply"
],
[
"mostr",
"https://furry.engineer/users/southernwolf/statuses/110667961870459101"
]
],
"content": "nostr:npub1vgs5rx9km8njvq8e5fs7a2c2yzzmvuwfjpqwgxxlyqf6kmfeds0q7suja8 Yup, and it's possible too that given enough time you'll see Haskell come back into form as Rust makes functional programming more popular. Alternatively, you may see a Haskell implementation in Rust itself, like I've seen done with Lisp already. Apparently someone made a rust macro that can take Lisp code directly and run it, which is quite cool! I could see some usefulness having a Haskell macro inside of Rust.",
"sig": "c5a9294f79eb23e5e3ea9bd90520383e765e2c052462056376c14ab4db7507a8345793dc3a84a05671892eff80690c18863cd5f532d6bb426adf7ea2beb6de66"
}