I should have explained better. Clojure is a dynamic language with optional typing. Also it's not an additional tool, it's baked into the language, and only possible because it's dynamic. The program is literally made from interpreting each statement instead of statically compiling everything at once.
There is also some power in not having types, or only optional types.
I really think it's a spectrum. Like in Java I sometimes miss the feature to make type aliases to make strings especially more safe. But 'cheating' with var in Java in selected places feels like a releave. And with Rust you are repeating some types a lot in some cases (but then you could use an alias). And typescript can be tricky when coming from Java, since it only checks compile time.
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I should have explained better. Clojure is a dynamic language with optional typing. Also it's not an additional tool, it's baked into the language, and only possible because it's dynamic. The program is literally made from interpreting each statement instead of statically compiling everything at once.
There is also some power in not having types, or only optional types.
I really think it's a spectrum. Like in Java I sometimes miss the feature to make type aliases to make strings especially more safe. But 'cheating' with var in Java in selected places feels like a releave. And with Rust you are repeating some types a lot in some cases (but then you could use an alias). And typescript can be tricky when coming from Java, since it only checks compile time.