Visit our site to listen to past episodes, support the show, join our community, and sign up for our mailing list. Summary Efene is a language that runs on the Erlang Virtual Machine (BEAM) and is inspired by the Zen of Python. It is intended as a bridge language that serves to ease the transition into the Erlang ecosystem for people who are coming from languages like Python. In this episode I spoke with Mariano Guerra, the creator of Efene, about how Python influenced his design choices, why you might want to use it, and when Python is the better tool. Brief Introduction Hello and welcome to Podcast.__init__, the podcast about Python and the people who make it great. Subscribe on iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn or RSS Follow us on Twitter or Google+ Give us feedback! Leave a review on iTunes, Tweet to us, send us an email or leave us a message on Google+ Join our community! Visit discourse.pythonpodcast.com for your opportunity to find out about upcoming guests, suggest questions, and propose show ideas. I would like to thank everyone who has donated to the show. Your contributions help us make the show sustainable. For details on how to support the show you can visit our site at pythonpodcast.com Linode is sponsoring us this week. Check them out at linode.com/podcastinit and get a $20 credit to try out their fast and reliable Linux virtual servers for your next project I would also like to thank Hired, a job marketplace for developers, for sponsoring this episode of Podcast.__init__. Use the link hired.com/podcastinit to double your signing bonus. Your host today is Tobias Macey Today we are interviewing Mariano Guerra about his work on the Efene language. Interview with Mariano Guerra Introductions How did you get introduced to Python? – Chris So Efene is a language that runs on the BEAM VM which you say was at least partially inspired by the Zen of Python. Can you explain in greater detail in what form that inspiration manifested and some of the process involved in the creation of Efene? – Tobias What inspired you to create Efene and what problems does it solve? – Tobias How does Efene compare to other BEAM based languages such as Elixir? – Tobias When would a Python developer want to consider using Efene? – Tobias What benefits does the BEAM provide that can’t be easily replicated in the Python ecosystem? – Tobias Does the Efene language ease the transition to a more functional mindset for developers who are already familiar with Python paradigms? – Tobias I understand that you are experimenting with another language implementation that runs on the BEAM. Can you describe that project and compare it to Efene? What were your inspirations? – Tobias Keep In Touch Twitter GitHub Blog Efene Emesene Python Argentina Picks Tobias Dotphiles The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Dynamic Typing for Practical Programs Mariano Om Next David Nolan on Om Next Clojurescript Things Network Links Erlang Elixir Lisp Flavored Erlang Joxa Rebar3 Erlang MK Hex Interfix The intro and outro music is from Requiem for a Fish The Freak Fandango Orchestra / CC BY-SA